Tbe plaintiff has gone into court asking recovery of tbe land, and tbe defendant asks a decree of. specific performance.
Tbe facts are found by tbe judge upon tbe pleadings and admissions of tbe parties. Tbe privy examination of tbe plaintiff was duly taken, but bis Honor correctly held tbat tbe deed was not sufficient as a conveyance because it lacked tbe “written assent of tbe husband.” Cons., Art. X, sec. 6.
Irrespective of tbat defect, it was not a conveyance of any title, because at tbe instant of making tbe deed tbe defendant conveyed back *316the property by a mortgage to secure tbe purchase money. It was therefore, in legal effect, in no sense a “conveyance,” but merely a contract to convey upon payment of the purchase money, notwithstanding that in form there was a deed from the plaintiff to the defendant and a mortgage deed back. This was held in Bunting v. Jones, 78 N. C., 242, and numerous citations thereto in Anno. Ed., holding that in such case “no title vested in the defendant whose wife acquired no dower or homestead rights therein.” ' It is therefore simply a “contract” that upon payment of the purchase money the plaintiff would convey the property. It has no other legal effect.
The Martin Act, ch. 109, Laws 1911, repealed Eev., 2094, and substituted therefor the following: “Every married woman shall be authorized to contract and deal so as to affect her real and personal property in the same manner and with the same effect as if she were unmarried” with the exception only of contracts with her husband under Eev., 2107; and as to “conveyances of her real estate” still requiring the written assent of the husband and privy examination. The sole exception as to contracts was as to contracts with her husband under Rev., 2107. Thrash v. Ould, 172 N. C., 730; Grocery Co. v. Bails, 177 N. C., 299, and cases there cited.
Further, after the death of her husband, the plaintiff recognizing fully the obligation of the contract endeavored to enforce it against the defendant, and advertised the property for sale under the mortgage. But when the defendant tendered her the full amount of the note and interest thereon, together with the costs of sale under the mortgage, and demanded execution of the deed for the property under the terms of the contract-she refused to comply and brought this action to recover the land, and the defendant asks a decree of specific performance.
■ Judge Guión, after; reciting in the judgment the facts above set out, as to which there was no controversy, recites, “The court being further of the opinion, while the deed set forth in the answer was invalid and ineffectual to convey said land by reason of the want of the written assent of the husband thereto, yet being of the opinion that said • deed so executed was a good and sufficient contract to convey said land under the provision of Laws 1911, ch. 109,” adjudges that there was a “good and sufficient contract to convey said land, and that upon payment to the plaintiff of the full sum evidenced by the notes described in the answer, with the interest thereon until paid, said plaintiff should execute to the defendant a deed for the land described in the complaint, and that the defendant recover of the plaintiff the costs of the action.”
This is in exact accordance with the terms of the contract which the plaintiff under the Martin Act had the right to make “in the same manner and with the same effect as if she were unmarried.” There is exactly the same enforcement of the contract against the plaintiff which *317sbe sought to have against the defendant after she again became a single woman by advertising the property for sale under the contract.
The just and accomplished judge applied to both parties the thrice repeated scriptual injunction, “With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again.” (Matthew 7:2, which was repeated in Mark 4:24 and Luke 7:38.) Equity and justice know ho higher standard than this. The plaintiff, her husband being dead, attempted to enforce the contract and cannot now complain that the Court has made her comply therewith.
While the husband lived the obligation of the contract could be enforced only by an action for damages (Warren v. Dail, 170 N. C., 406), for the reason that the court could not require specific performance because it could not compel the husband to give his written assent (Fortune v. Watkins, 94 N. C., 315, which was the case where the wife refused to join in the husband’s deed), but the husband being dead there is no obstacle now in requiring the plaintiff to comply with her contract by specific performance.
Affirmed.