This was an action to recover damages for wrongful foreclosure and sale of plaintiff's land. The record discloses the following material facts:
In 1928 plaintiff borrowed $2,500 from the defendant Land Bank, and to secure the same executed deed of trust on her land to the Southern Trust Company, trustee. The name of the trustee was subsequently changed to the Southern Loan Insurance Company. Default having been made in the payment of the debt, foreclosure sale was had on 14 November, 1934, and the defendant Land Bank became the last and highest bidder for the land in the sum of $2,400. Report of sale was filed with the clerk 18 January, 1935, and on same date deed from the trustee to the Land Bank was executed. On the following day, 19 January, 1935, the defendant Land Bank conveyed the land to E. H. and G. M. Swanner for the consideration of $3,500.
The plaintiff, conceding that the Swanners were innocent purchasers for value, brought her action against the Land Bank alleging an invalid *Page 208 foreclosure, and offered evidence tending to show that the advertisement of the foreclosure sale did not specify the place of sale, that the sale was made by one employee of defendant and bid off for the Land Bank by another employee of defendant, and that the land was worth much more than the price at which it was bid off and conveyed to the Land Bank.
The trial judge stated that upon this evidence he would charge the jury that the sale of the land was not a proper and valid foreclosure of plaintiff's equity of redemption therein, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the difference between what the jury should find the land was worth in January, 1935, and the amount of plaintiff's debt. It was thereupon agreed by defendant (reserving its exceptions to the court's ruling with respect to the validity of the foreclosure sale) that the following issue should be submitted to the jury: "What was the value of plaintiff's land, referred to in the complaint, on 19 January, 1935?" It was further agreed that the court might deduct the amount of plaintiff's debt from the amount found by the jury in answer to said issue.
The jury answered the issue $5,000 and the court deducted $3,242.87 as amount of plaintiff's debt and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the difference, to wit, $1,757.13. From this judgment defendant Land Bank appealed. Defendant's principal assignment of error is based upon the denial of its motion to strike certain allegations from the complaint, on the ground that they were irrelevant and prejudicial.
The motion, however, was made after answer and on the day the case was calendared for trial, and was denied for the reason that it was not made in apt time (C. S., 537). The defendant then asked that its motion be allowed as a matter of discretion, and this was denied as not being a matter in the court's discretion. When the case was reached for trial three days later the defendant again moved to strike out the offending allegations, and the motion was denied.
While the motion to strike was not made in proper time, that did not divest the court of the power, in the exercise of its sound discretion, to allow the motion during the term at which the case was on the calendar for trial, and the statement of the judge below, in denying the motion when first made, that it was not a matter of discretion, was an inadvertence (Hines v. Lucas, 195 N.C. 376, 142 S.E. 319; Washington v. Hodges,200 N.C. 364, 156 S.E. 912; C. S., 536). But the motion to strike was made later in the week before the trial was begun, and the record at that time shows merely that the motion was denied. No *Page 209 reason was assigned for the action of the court. There is no presumption that the later ruling was based upon want of power. The record does not preclude the assumption that the motion was denied in the exercise of discretion, since, as was said in Hogsed v. Pearlman, 213 N.C. 240: "The ruling of the court below, in the consideration of an appeal, is presumed to be correct." In this view the defendant's exception to the former ruling of the court would seem to be without merit. Nor do the facts show an abuse of discretion. But if it be conceded that the last ruling of the court was also based on the erroneous view of want of power and that there was a failure to exercise the discretion vested in the court, nevertheless it appears that in the trial no evidence was admitted in support of the irrelevant allegations sought to be stricken from the complaint, and we cannot hold that the jury was influenced or the defendant prejudiced thereby, so as to require the granting of a new trial.
The uncontradicted evidence bearing on the invalidity of the foreclosure was sufficient to sustain the ruling of the trial judge thereon (Davis v.Doggett, 212 N.C. 589; Warren v. Susman, 168 N.C. 457, 84 S.E. 760;Hayes v. Pace, 162 N.C. 288, 78 S.E. 290; 41 C. J., 953), and this left as the only controverted issue the value of the land at the time the title passed to innocent purchasers for value. The form of the issue was agreed to by the defendant. There was competent evidence to support the verdict of the jury and the charge of the court was free from error.
We have examined the other exceptions noted by defendant during the trial and find therein no sufficient ground upon which to overthrow the verdict and judgment below.
No error.