Rich v. . Morisey

DEFENDANT'S APPEAL. (38) The facts disclosed by the pleadings and verdict of the jury are: O. B. Morisey, the ancestor of feme plaintiff, being the owner of the tract of land in controversy, containing 140 acres, on 3 December, 1874, executed a mortgage thereon to D. G. Morisey to secure the payment of a note for $627. During the year 1883 said O. B. Morisey died intestate, leaving the feme plaintiff, an infant, his only heir at law. D. G. Morisey duly qualified as his administrator and sold the personalty for the sum of $151, of which he made due return to the clerk of the Superior Court. During February, 1884, said D. G. Morisey, pursuant to the power of sale in said mortgage, sold the land at public auction for $1,500. At the sale, one A. F. Johnson bid in the land, but no deed from said Morisey to Johnson appears of record. He bought for, and at the request of, said D. G. Morisey and paid no money on account of his bid. A. F. Johnson conveyed to D. G. Morisey, who went into possession of said land and remained therein until his death, during the year 1901. On 19 March, 1901, said D. G. Morisey, as administrator of O. B. Morisey, filed in the clerk's office his final account, *Page 29 wherein he charged himself with the sum of $151, proceeds sale of the personalty, and $1,500, proceeds sale of the land. He credited himself with the mortgage debt and the sum of $614.97, "amount retained on account." The debit and credit items, including interest and expenses of administration, left in his hands $12.11, which he retained as commissions. The account was duly verified before the clerk. The feme plaintiff was married to her coplaintiff 3 November, 1898, before arriving at full age. D. G. Morisey died on the ___ day of ___, 1901, having first made and published his last will and testament appointing defendant James K. Morisey executor thereto. In his said will, D. G. Morisey devised to feme plaintiff, Penny O. Rich, the portion of the land in controversy, upon which her father lived, containing 50 acres, and fifty dollars in money. The remaining ninety (90) acres of land were devised to his nieces, the defendants Walker Morisey and Annie (39) Hubbard. The will was read to all the devisees, including the plaintiffs. In a short time thereafter, 1 January, 1902, the fifty acres devised to feme plaintiff was surveyed by direction of the executor and with the assent of plaintiff, and she, with her husband, took possession thereof and has remained in possession thereof to the time of the trial. The devisees other than plaintiff sold and conveyed the land so devised to them, subsequent to October, 1905, to defendant John B. Moore for full value. Upon issues submitted to them, the jury find that defendant Moore was a purchaser for value and without notice of any debt due by D. G. Morisey; that he was not a purchaser without notice of plaintiff's "claims"; that the value of the land, at the time of the sale under the mortgage, was $1,500; that plaintiffs have not ratified and affirmed the mortgage sale; that the value of the personal estate of said O. B. Morisey was as shown by the record ($151); that the annual rental value of the land, from the time D. G. Morisey took possession until his death, was $125; that the annual rental value, after cutting off the fifty acres devised to feme plaintiff, is $50. His Honor, upon the foregoing findings, directed the jury to answer the issue, in regard to the right of plaintiffs to redeem, in the affirmative. A number of exceptions were lodged by plaintiffs and defendants to the issues submitted, and to the refusal to submit others tendered. No issues were tendered regarding the statute of limitations. Upon the verdict plaintiffs and defendants tendered judgments, each of which his Honor declined to sign. He signed the judgment set out in the record, reciting the verdict upon the issues and such other facts as were not controverted, which are hereinbefore set out. He thereupon rendered the following judgment:

1. That the plaintiff is entitled to redeem said land.

2. That the final account of said administrator, until impeached, isprima facie correct. *Page 30

(40) 3. That said land being charged in said final account at the sum of $1,500, and the same being used in the payment of debts of the said O. B. Morisey, and to that extent having exonerated the interest of the plaintiff in the lands in controversy from the payment of debts, the plaintiff upon the statement of the account between her and the defendants, is chargeable with said sum of $1,500 as of 27 February, 1884, and that the rents and profits as found by the jury should be applied thereto. It is thereupon considered and adjudged that the defendant J. B. Moore holds the title to said land in trust for the plaintiff Penny O. Rich, and, upon the payment of the sum of $164.13, the balance after applying the rents to said sum of $1,500 by the said Penny O. Rich, with interest from 9 December, 1907, that he convey the same to her in fee.

It is further considered and adjudged, that upon failure of the said Penny O. Rich to pay said sum of $164.13, with interest from 9 December, 1907, within ninety days, the clerk of the Superior Court of Sampson County, W. F. Sessoms, who is now appointed a commissioner for that purpose, sell said land at public outcry, at the courthouse door in Clinton, after due advertisement, for the payment of said sum, and that he report his proceedings to this court.

It is further considered and adjudged that the plaintiffs recover of the defendants their costs.

Both parties excepted and appealed. DEFENDANTS' APPEAL. After stating the case: Before proceeding to discuss the exceptions directed to the merits of the case, it is proper to say that, in our opinion, the issues submitted by his Honor present every (41) phase of the controversy proper to be passed upon by the jury. While it is true that, in regard to some of the issues, there are no specific allegations in the pleadings, yet it is obvious that no decree adjusting the rights of the parties could have been rendered until the court was informed, either by the findings of the jury, or upon the report of a referee, in regard to the matters involved in such issues. Under the system of procedure which prevailed with us prior to the adoption of the Code, the plaintiffs would have sought relief by a bill in equity. While it is true that every issuable controverted fact, as distinguished from mere evidentiary facts, must be found by the jury upon appropriate issues, it is equally true, to a large extent, that the form of the issues is *Page 31 within the sound judicial discretion of the court. Emry v. R. R.,102 N.C. 209; Springer v. Shavender, 116 N.C. 12; Paper Co. v. ChronicleCo., 115 N.C. 676.

When it is manifest that all of the essential facts, upon which the rights of the parties depend, appear upon the pleadings or have been found by the jury, this Court will not, upon a mere question of form, set aside the judgment and subject the parties to a new trial involving delay and expense. In questions of procedure, errors, if found to exist, must appear to be prejudicial to appellant to entitle him to a new trial. It is evident that his Honor grasped the scope of the litigation and has, by the verdict of the jury, together with the admissions in the pleadings, rendered a decree which puts an end to the litigation in regard to matters and transactions which occurred twenty-four years ago. Two nonsuits have been taken. Delays have been had during which transactions and the character of men who have passed away are attacked. A purchaser for full value from the devisees of D. G. Morisey, more than two years after his death and after the present plaintiffs by acquiescence and acceptance of a devise of a portion of the same land, and after two judgments of nonsuit had been rendered, finds his title brought into litigation. (42)

It will be convenient to discuss the defendants' appeal first. It appears that plaintiffs instituted an action in forma pauperis based upon the same allegations and asking the same relief to the Spring Term, 1902, of SAMPSON. Defendants, upon affidavit, moved to "dispauper" them, whereupon they submitted to a judgment of nonsuit at October Term, 1902. They brought a second action within a year and, at October Term, 1905, upon the motion of defendants for the same reason the court dismissed the action, from which no appeal was taken. On 6 July, 1906, they brought this action in forma pauperis. Defendants moved, before Judge Jones, to dismiss for that it appeared that the feme plaintiff owned fifty acres of land worth more than $200; that the second action was brought more than a year after the first nonsuit; that plaintiffs were estopped by the order dismissing the action, at October Term, 1905, by which they were "dispaupered." Upon this motion, Judge Jones found that plaintiffs were not able to give a prosecution, bond and refused to dismiss. They rely upon section 451, Revisal. This section permits a party to sue in forma pauperis by showing to the judge or clerk that he has a good cause of action and makes affidavit that he is unable to give the bond or make the deposit required by section 450. It differs from section 454, which requires the defendant, before answering without filing defense bond, to make affidavit "that he is not worth the amount of said undertaking, in any property whatsoever, and is unable to give the bond." While the dismissal of the *Page 32 action by one judge does not estop plaintiff from bringing a second action, the fact of such dismissal should be considered by the clerk or judge and given due weight when the party makes the second application. To permit repeated actions to be brought, under section 451, to the annoyance and expense of parties, hindering them in the enjoyment and sale of property, would be an abuse of a privilege which the law (43) confers upon poor persons acting in good faith. It is very easy to obtain the certificate of counsel who hear but one side of the case, in the not unnatural coloring of the party desiring to sue. The exception to the refusal of Judge Jones to dismiss the action can not be sustained. The action of the judge who dismissed at a former term was not a judgment upon the merits and therefore was not res adjudicata in respect to a second application to sue.

The defendants except to the refusal of his Honor to submit an issue, tendered by them, inquiring whether feme plaintiff accepted the fifty acres of land and went into possession thereof under the will of D. G. Morisey, before the commencement of this action. The defendants insist that if this issue was answered affirmatively, the feme plaintiff would be thereby estopped; that she would not be permitted to take the fifty acres under the will and claim the right to redeem the entire tract, as heir of her father. His Honor submitted an issue pointed to the question of ratification of the attempted sale under the mortgage, which covers the contention of defendants. He instructed the jury that the only evidence of a ratification was that of her conduct, in respect to the fifty acres. That to constitute a ratification, the acts relied upon must have been done with a knowledge of the facts — that is, of the attempted sale, etc. He further instructed them, that if she knew of the mortgage and the sale thereunder and that D. G. Morisey had given her the fifty acres of land in his will, and with a knowledge of these facts she entered upon and accepted the land under said will, this contract, on her part, would be a ratification. To this instruction defendants excepted. The issue presented and, in the light of the instruction, the jury passed upon the question of her acceptance of the devise. We think the instruction correct.

We do not find in the testimony sent up any evidence that the feme plaintiff had any knowledge or information respecting the sale (44) by D. G. Morisey and the conveyance to him by Johnson. She was a small child when her father died and when the sale took place. It may well be that she knew that her uncle had a mortgage on the land and that he had taken possession of it. However this may be, the question was left to the jury in as favorable light as defendants were entitled to, and they have found for her. His Honor could not, as a *Page 33 matter of law, have held that she had elected and ratified a void or voidable sale, thereby foreclosing the right to redeem.

It is suggested that she was put to her election to accept the fifty acres and thereby surrendered her right to redeem the entire tract, or to reject the devise and assert her claim. The equitable doctrine of election between inconsistent benefits is well settled by numerous decisions of this Court and all works on equity jurisprudence. It applies when a testator attempts to devise the property of A to B and, at the same time, gives his own property to A. If both the elements do not combine, the doctrine is not invoked or, as it is said, there is no case for an election. Bispham Eq., 298. It is very doubtful whether the facts before us present a case in which the plaintiff, if sui juris, is put to her election. Morisey owned as mortgagee the entire tract and plaintiff, as heir of her father, was entitled to redeem. The devisor held the legal title to the whole and the plaintiff had the equity of redemption in the same property. These facts do not bring the case within the doctrine. Again, the plaintiff was a feme covert, and before being put to her election was entitled to have a full disclosure of the value of the property and of her right to redemption, to the end that she might have a full opportunity to exercise her election, if required to make one before suing, and to act advisedly. The general rule is, that "to estop a married woman from alleging a claim to land, there must be some positive act of fraud, or something done upon which a person dealing with her, or in a matter affecting her rights, might reasonably rely, and upon which he did rely and was thereby injured." Towles v. Fisher, 77 N.C. (45) 437; Weathersby v. Farrar, 97 N.C. 106; Wells v. Batts,112 N.C. 283. It was certainly not fraudulent as against the other devisees for plaintiff to enter upon the fifty acres. They had, so far as the record shows, the same knowledge regarding the condition of the title as she did. They took under the will of D. G. Morisey and are not purchasers for value. It cannot be seen how they were misled or parted with anything of value, or surrendered any right, by reason of her conduct. In regard to defendant John B. Moore, he purchased after the nonsuit. This should have put him upon inquiry as to her claim, and the jury find that he was not a purchaser for value without notice thereof. The exception of defendants to his Honor's ruling, in this respect, can not be sustained.

The defendants except to his Honor's refusal to permit them to show that O. B. Morisey was insolvent at the time of his death. We see no error in this. It was not relevant to, and could not affect the verdict upon any issue, besides, with the final account of the administrator in evidence, unimpeached, insolvency was clearly shown.

Exception is taken because his Honor failed to submit any issue upon *Page 34 the statute of limitations. It is sufficient to say that, as no such issue was tendered, and the court was not requested to submit one, it is too late after verdict to assign the failure to do as error. Clark's Code, sec. 395, where the cases are collected sustaining his Honor. No statute is pleaded except by defendant John B. Moore, who relies upon the statute protecting a purchaser from the heir or devisee, two years after the death of the ancestor or devisor, without notice of the indebtedness. This statute has no application here. The plaintiff is not seeking to enforce the collection of a debt from the executor of Morisey. The jury find that defendant Moore had no notice of any debt against Morisey, (46) hence that question, in any point of view, is eliminated. His Honor, upon the finding of the jury and the pleadings, held that the feme plaintiff was entitled to redeem and so instructed the jury, or so answered the issue himself. Defendants excepted. It is well settled, both upon principle and uniform authority, with us, that a mortgagee cannot foreclose the equity of redemption by a sale of the property under the power and a purchase by himself. Such sale and attempted purchase is void or voidable at the election of the mortgagor. The mortgagee, in respect to the exercise of the power of sale, is a trustee, and the well settled rule which prohibits a trustee from purchasing the property conveyed to, or held by him in trust, from acquiring title as against the cestui que trust, has been uniformly applied. In Froneberger v. Lewis, 79 N.C. 426, Bynum, J., reviews the decisions of this Court, showing that they are uniform in this respect. In Jones v. Pullen, 115 N.C. 465, Shepherd, C. J., says: "There is no question, according to our authorities, that if a mortgagee with power to sell indirectly purchases at his own sale, the mortgagor may elect to avoid the sale, and this without reference to its having been fairly made, and for a reasonable price. This is an inflexible rule, and it is not because there is, but because there may be, fraud." His Honor's ruling, in this respect, is in conformity with the uniform decisions of this Court and the well settled principles of equity. We reserve the exception to the refusal of his Honor to sign the judgment tendered by defendants until we have examined them and have disposed of the exceptions lodged by plaintiffs.

Affirmed.

Cited: Chilton v. Groome, 168 N.C. 641; McKinney v. Patterson,174 N.C. 488.

(47)

PLAINTIFFS' APPEAL.