Woodcock v. . Merrimon

30 S.E. 321, 122 N.C. 731, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 337
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 S.E. 321 (Woodcock v. . Merrimon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodcock v. . Merrimon, 30 S.E. 321, 122 N.C. 731, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 337 (N.C. 1898).

Opinions

Montgomery, J.:

In August, 1890, J. B. Bostic sold and conveyed to D. D. Suttle a piece of land of about twelve acres in or near Asheville. For a part of the purchase money Suttle executed his note for the amount of $5,500 to Bostick and secured the same by a deed of trust upon the land — J. Gr. Merrimon being named as the trustee. About the 11th of September, 1890, Bos-tick endorsed this note to the plaintiff for value. This action was brought to compel the trustee Merrimon to sell the land conveyed in the deed of trust to pay the debt secured therein. In her complaint the plaintiff alleges that she had requested the trustee to sell the land under the provisions of the trust and that he refused to sell the whole of' the land alleging as a reason for his refusal that he had released five acres thereof upon the margin of the registry where the deed was registered, by a writing as follows: “1. J. Gr. Merri-mon, trustee, do hereby release and discharge from any and all liability in this deed of trust all of that portion of said land conveyed by E. H. Wright and wife to J. R. Rich by deed dated November 24th, 1891. Witness my hand and seal this the 25th day of November, 1891. J. G. Merrimon. (Seal.) Witness: J. J. Mackey.”

[733]*733' The plaintiff further alleged that the whole of the land would not be sufficient to pay the debt, and that, if Merrimon executed the writing upon the margin of the registry, he did so without consideration moving to her, without authority from her and that such writing was not authorized in the deed of trust and is void. The defendant Merrimon, in his answer, admitted that the plaintiff through her attorney had requested him to sell the whole of the land and that he had refused to sell five acres thereof, because, as he averred, he had as trustee made and signed, upon the margin of the registry of the deed of trust, the entry set forth in the complaint and that he was duly authorized by the agent and the attorney of the plaintiff to make the entry. The defendant Merrimon further averred that the consideration which induced the plaintiff to agree to and authorize the release of the lien of the trust deed upon the five acres described in the entry on the registry, was a certain obligation, and contract entered into on the 6th of February, 1892, between J. M. Ray and J. B. Bostic, in which contract, for the consideration therein named, Ray agreed to assume and pay the note of Suttle to Bostic in the hands of the plaintiff, and that this contract and agreement was delivered to the plaintiff. The defendant Rich in his answer sets up his purchase of the five acre tract and avers that the plaintiff for a valuable consideration authorized the trustee Merrimon to make the entry on the registry.

At the March Term, 1897, after trial, verdict, and judgment, an order was made in the following words : It is ordered that defendant Rich have leave to file an amended answer as he may be advised, said amended answer to be filed within 60 days from date hereof. As a condition of granting this amendment said Rich is or[734]*734dered. to pay all the costs of this action up to and including the Term, which costs shall never be taxed against plaintiff, whatever may be the final result. If said costs are not fully paid within sixty days from this date, then all the said answers of defendants are to be stricken out entirely and judgment rendered at next Term, for plaintiff. To this order the defendants consent in open court. The findings and judgment and orders of the court herein at this term are set aside.”

At the succeeding term of the court, the plaintiff made a motion before Timberlake, J., for judgment in accordance with the order made at the preceding term, and at the same time a counter motion wus made by the defendant Rich to be allowed to file an amended answer as of date subsequent to the time limited in the order of March term, 1897. Judge Timberlake denied the plaintiff’s motion, set aside so much of the order made at March term, 189T, as limited the time allowed to the defendant Rich to file his answer and pay the costs, and permitted him to file his amended answer as of the time allowed in the order of March term, i897. The plaintiff excepted to this ruling of his Honor and insisted that it was not lawful for one Superior Court Judge to vacate the judgment and order made by another Judge in the same cause, and cites the case of Henry v. Hilliard, 120 N. C., 479, to sustain his position.

We are of the opinion, however, that the case before us and that of Henry v. Hilliard bear no resemblance to each other. In Henry v. Hilliard there was a final judgment affecting the merits and the vital interests of the case and was conclusive of the litigation. The order made at March term, 1897, in this case cannot be considered as a judgment of the court, in the sense of affecting the rights and interests involved in the litiga[735]*735tion. It is only an order made .in reference to pleading and practice. It was out of his Honor’s power to order what kind of a judgment should in the future be entered up by another Judge. The future judgment was a matter to be entirely left to the Judge who might then preside under the conditions that might then appear. The fact that the defendants in the case consented to the order of March term, 1897, did not make the order a judgment conclusive of their rights, but at most .was a contract which the Judge, who followed, for reasons satisfactory to him, did not enforce. The courts have discretion, not re viewable, to extend the time for filing pleadings. Gwinn v. Parker, 119 N. C., 19; Bailey v. Commissioners, 120 N. C., 388. The Code, Section 274, provides that “The Judge may likewise, in his discretion and upon such terms as may be just, allow an answer or reply to be made, or other act to be done after the time limited, or by an order to- enlarge such time.'’ In Gilchrist v. Kitchen, 86 N. C., 20, the court says: “But, independent of The Code, we hold that the right to amend the pleadings in the cause and allow answers or other pleadings to be filed at any time, is an inherent power of the Superior Courts which they may exercise at their discretion. The Judge presiding is best presumed to know what orders and what indulgence as to filing of pleadings will promote the ends of justice as they arise in each particular case, and with the exercise of this discretion this court cannot interfere because it is not the subject of appeal.” Austin v. Clarke, 70 N. C., 458.

Under the order of Judge Timberlake, the defendant Rich filed an amended answer, which presented a different case entirely from that which appeared in the original pleadings. He averred that the entry made by [736]*736the trustee- Merrimon, on the registry, was not only a deed of release to himself made with the consent and approval and knowledge of the plaintiff for a valuable consideration, but that it was a memorandum or note in writing of an agreement or contract to sell and release and convey the land therein described and conveyed to the defendant Rich, signed and executed by the defendant Merrimon, trustee, by the authority and consent of, and as the agent and trustee of the plaintiff. The defendant Rich sets up another defence, and that was that the plaintiff afterwards ratified and affirmed the action of the trustee in making the entry on the registry.

Two issues were submitted to the jury: 1. “DidT. H.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E. 321, 122 N.C. 731, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodcock-v-merrimon-nc-1898.