The principle that a trust may be created by a declaration contained in a separate instrument, or in several instruments, other than the deed conveying the legal title, provided they have sufficient relation to each other and construed together evidence such trust, is generally recognized. 65 C. J., p. 262, et seq.
Counsel for the defendants, appellees, do not dispute the proposition that the deed to Grace C. LeRoy and the agreement signed by her and her husband were simultaneously made and in law must be regarded as constituting the same transaction; but they do contend that, so considered, the agreement relates merely to the consideration to be paid for the land — or the proceeds of sale — and raises no enforceable trust between the parties affecting the land itself — citing Michael v.Foil, 100 N.C. 178, 6 S.E. 264; Sprague v. Bond, 108 N.C. 382,13 S.E. 143; and Bourne v. Sherrill, 143 N.C. 381, 55 S.E. 799. Thus it was contended in the oral argument that if plaintiffs could state a cause of action at all based on the alleged transaction, it would necessarily be for a breach of contract sounding in damages, as to which the declaration, liberally construed, is equally defective. Hawkins v. Land Bank,221 N.C. 73.
However, there are distinctions in fact and in legal principle between the cited cases and the case at bar which we think make them inapplicable as deciding authority in support of this contention. In Michael v. Foil,supra, and Bourne v. Sherrill, supra, the agreement, in totidem verbis, related to a division of proceeds or profits upon the sale of the *Page 126 lands, if and when made. In Sprague v. Bond, supra, the oral agreement did purport to set up a trust requiring the lands to be sold and there was an agreement that after paying certain expenses the proceeds should be divided. That part of the agreement relating to the trust was held to be within the statute of frauds and unenforceable for that reason; but the part of the agreement relating to the division of the proceeds after the sale of the land (and on page 385 the expression "after the sale of the land" is written in italics) was held not to impinge upon the terms of the written conveyance, but to relate entirely to the payment of the consideration, and not being within the statute of frauds, it was enforceable. The record does not disclose that any basis had been laid in the complaint for the engrafting of a parol trust upon the deed.
The agreement under consideration is in writing and is, therefore, not within the statute of frauds. The appellees contend, however, that if the agreement should be viewed as creating a trust, it must then necessarily reinvest the plaintiff grantors in the deed of conveyance with some right, title or interest in the property which had gone out of them by virtue of their conveyance, and that, therefore, the instrument is void for want of privy examination of Mrs. LeRoy. C. S., 997; Warren v. Dail, 170 N.C. 406,87 S.E. 126. And they contend that Sprague v. Bond, supra, followed by Bourne v. Sherrill, supra, have that connotation. Compare C. S., 997, and C. S., 988.
However, these expressions in Sprague v. Bond, supra, and the reference in Bourne v. Sherrill, supra, are obiter dicta, unnecessary to a decision in the case, since in each case the sale had been voluntarily made and the action related merely to a division of the proceeds. Had the question been squarely presented, there is no doubt that the Court would have given weight to the fact of simultaneous execution in harmony with general authority on the subject and considered decisions of our own Court. Brogdenv. Gibson, 165 N.C. 16, 80 S.E. 966; Newby v. Realty Co., 182 N.C. 34,108 S.E. 323; Anderson v. Harrington, 163 N.C. 140, 79 S.E. 426.
In Brogden v. Gibson, supra, it is pointed out that that part of the English statute of frauds which requires a declaration of trust to be in writing had never been enacted in North Carolina; ours does not include them in its prohibition; and furthermore, a proper interpretation of C. S., 988, confines the expression "contracts to sell or convey lands" to sale and purchase between the parties whereby one or the other acquires some interest in the land.
And in Newby v. Realty Co., 182 N.C. 34, 108 S.E. 323, the Court observes under the situation there existing: "The plaintiffs have not contracted to sell or convey any lands to the defendants, nor have the defendants agreed to buy and pay for the same, nor vice versa." *Page 127 Newby v. Realty Co., supra, and Brogden v. Gibson, supra, are parallel in pointing out the distinction which exists between a contract to sell or convey lands, which is within the statute of frauds, and the establishment of a trust, which is not. In the first class, a suit would be for specific performance of a contract; in the second, for enforcement of a parol trust.
In Anderson v. Harrington, supra, where the deed was made to the defendant in accordance with an agreement that the timber upon the land should be cut and the net proceeds turned over to Harrington until the purchase price had been paid, and the land should then be sold and the proceeds divided between them, the Court sustained the enforcement of the trust, although in parol.
"This is not an action for specific performance of a contract in the sale of land, but one to establish a trust. One of the four methods of creating a trust is by contract, based upon valuable consideration, to stand seized to the use of or in trust for another. Wood v. Cherry,73 N.C. 115.
"It is so well settled in this State that the statute of frauds, requiring a memorandum in writing in respect to the sale of land to be signed by the party charged, does not apply to the declaration of trusts, that it is a waste of time to discuss the question at this late day. Riggsv. Swann, 59 N.C. 118.
"At common law it was not necessary that a trust be declared in any particular mode. In England the statute requires that declarations of trust be evidenced and proved by some writing, but in this State there is no such requirement, and therefore the matter stands as at common law. Riggs v.Swann, 59 N.C. 118; Shelton v. Shelton, 58 N.C. 292."
Declarations of trust made simultaneously with the acceptance of a legal title, although not embodied therein, have not generally been regarded as requiring formal execution or acknowledgment unless that is required by statute, and here there is no statute directly requiring it and it is not inferentially required since its character as a conveyance is thus negatived. Such declarations of trust made contemporaneously with transmission of the title are uniformly enforced. Blackburn v. Blackburn,109 N.C. 488, 489, 13 S.E. 937; Pittman v. Pittman, 107 N.C. 159,12 S.E. 61. Says the Court in Blackburn v. Blackburn, supra: "A fortiori will the Court give effect to such a contemporaneous declaration when made in writing under seal and for a good consideration. No particular form of words is necessary to establish such a trust. `The intent is what the Court looks to.'"
The question might be different if the feme defendant had obtained her title from some source other than the plaintiffs or if some *Page 128 circumstance, whether of time or relation, might eradicate the plain fact that the documents were simultaneously executed with a purpose, the understanding of which can be found only in their joint interpretation. It cannot be conceded that the title came to rest in Mrs. LeRoy, unaffected by the condition of its acceptance as expressed in the contemporaneous agreement. To do so would be, in effect, to construe the documents separately. This would destroy the legal inferences flowing from their simultaneous execution — their factual relation as a written expression of a single oral treaty would be denied its effect in determining the intent and purpose of the parties.
We are of the opinion that, considering the documents together and as relating to the same transaction, the agreement executed by Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy was no more than a contemporaneous expression of the trust by which she held the legal title and not a reconveyance of any interest she held in the land, and it, therefore, required no privy examination.
It may be a serious question whether equity will interfere to force a sale where the contract assumes the existence of profits which the holder of the title may not be able to realize upon the sale, but that question is not now before us.
Giving the pleading a liberal construction, which the practice requires, we think there was error in sustaining the demurrer, and the judgment is
Reversed.