147 S.E. 829 | N.C. | 1929
This action was instituted by the American Blower Company to recover the sum of $5,422.10 with interest from 31 August, 1926, alleged to be due for appliances and equipment sold to the defendant. It was alleged in the complaint that the defendant was indebted in large amounts to sundry other creditors; that he was insolvent, and that the administration of his estate demanded the appointment of a receiver. Other creditors were given leave to join in the suit. Upon admission of all the allegations in the complaint Judge Oglesby, finding as a fact that the defendant was insolvent, appointed a receiver of his property. At this time the defendant was the owner in fee of two lots in the city of Greensboro. On the first lot was a deed of trust executed on 31 March, 1920, by the defendant and his wife to Julian Price, as trustee for the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company; on the second, a deed of trust executed by the defendant to the Atlantic Bank Trust Company, as trustee for G.S. Boren and C. H. Andrews, on 18 March, 1925; and on both lots, a deed of trust dated 14 July, 1925, executed by the defendant and his wife to R. D. Douglas, as trustee for the Greensboro Bank Trust Company. The deed held by Price was executed to secure an indebtedness of $20,000 evidenced by notes signed by the defendant and his wife, to whom the surplus in case of sale was to be paid — the remainder due on these notes and assumed by the purchaser being $17,451.61. The deed held by the Atlantic Bank Trust Company was made to secure a debt of $71,500 as the purchase price of land, evidenced by notes signed by the defendant, to whom upon sale the surplus was to be paid — the remainder due and assumed by the purchaser being $45,750. The deed held by R. D. Douglas was *154 intended to secure notes signed by the defendant, to whom any surplus was to be paid, the remainder due and assumed by the purchaser being $30,304.61.
By an order of court the receiver was authorized to sell the defendant's assets by public auction or at private sale. He reported that he had received from C. C. Hudson an offer to pay $126,000 for the two lots on these terms: Hudson was to get a deed in fee with full covenants and was to assume payment of the deeds of trust; and all taxes and assessments against the property were to be paid by the receiver or credited on the amount offered. The defendant and his wife consented to join the receiver in conveying the property to Hudson for the purpose of releasing such right of homestead or inchoate right of dower as they were entitled to, with the understanding that the funds derived from the sale of the property should be impressed with such right of homestead or inchoate right of dower. The offer was accepted, and on 18 June, 1927, they and the receiver executed and delivered to Hudson, Incorporated, a deed in fee, in which is recited the purchaser's agreement to pay the amounts secured by the respective deeds of trust.
The receiver advertised for claims and among those presented was that of the defendant's wife, Ethel T. MacKenzie. She contended that as the funds were to be impressed with her inchoate right of dower she was entitled to $25,568.18 on this theory: her expectancy was 31.1 years and that of her husband 14.7 years; one-third of the income from the purchase price of the property was $2,530; the cash annuity of one dollar for 16.4 years (her expectancy beyond that of her husband) according to the annuity tables (C. S., 1791) is $10.106, and the cash value of an annuity of $2,530 for the same period is $25,568.18.
The receiver rejected this claim on the ground that during the life of the husband the wife had no vested interest or estate in his property which would entitle her to participate in the fund either as a preferred or as an unsecured creditor. Upon exceptions filed Judge Stack gave judgment as follows: that two-thirds of the amount available to creditors ($29,521.45) be paid ratably to the creditors whose claims had been allowed and that the remaining one-third be turned over to the clerk to be loaned on good security; that the income therefrom during the joint lives of the defendant and his wife, after payment of all taxes, be distributed from time to time ratably on the allowed claims; that if the claimant die before her husband the principal and undistributed interest be paid on such claim; that if she survive her husband the income be paid to her during her natural life or at her election the present cash value; and that after her death the fund be distributed *155 ratably among the creditors whose claims had been allowed. The claimant excepted and appealed.
In rendering judgment his Honor probably had in mind the principle stated in Vartie v. Underwood, 18 Barb. (N. Y.), 561, as it is given inGore v. Townsend,
Inchoate dower or the inchoate right of dower is the interest which the wife has in the lands of her husband during his life and which may become a right of dower upon his death. Black's Law Dictionary. In Gwathmey v.Pearce,
The inchoate right of dower is not an estate in land; it confers no control of the land or right of possession; but it is a subsisting, substantial right, possessing some of the incidents of property and having a present cash value, which, as said by Scribner, is capable of computation. Gore v. Townsend, supra; 19 C. J., 493.
The last statement is at variance with the position that there is no scale or standard for ascertaining the present worth of the widow's inchoate right (Reiff v. Horst,
This is the most feasible rule; but what is the basis upon which the computation shall be made? Is it the full value of the real estate ($126,000), or the full value less the amount due on the purchase price, or the full value less the amount remaining due on the two deeds of trust signed by the wife, or the surplus or net amount remaining after payment of the encumbrance? The receiver and the creditors say the basis last named is the correct one for the reason that the receiver's sale, in which the defendant and his wife took part, was in legal effect a foreclosure of the deeds of trust and that the claimant, if her husband were dead, would be dowable only in the surplus remaining after paying *157
the debts secured by the deeds of trust. Jones on Mortgages (6 ed.), sec. 666. Pingrey on Mortgages, sec. 2013; 2 Scribner on Dower, 607; Annotation to Commercial B. T. Co. v. Dudley, 12 A.L.R., 1358; Bailey v. Bailey,
Foreclosure of a mortgage or deed of trust may be effected by a decree in equity by which the mortgagor's right to redeem the estate is defeated or by the execution of a power of sale contained in the mortgage or deed of trust without recourse to the courts. Whether in the case before us there was a foreclosure depends upon the legal effect of the transaction between the purchaser and the grantors in the receiver's deed. The purchaser's offer was to "assume" payment of the secured indebtedness; Judge Oglesby's order authorized conveyance of the mortgaged property to the purchaser, subject to the encumbrances; both the receiver's report and the receiver's deed refer to the deeds of trust as having been "assumed" by the purchaser. The record does not show whether these assumed debts have been paid; they may be yet outstanding. Nor does it appear that the trustees or the beneficiaries of the trusts were parties to the agreement between the grantors and the purchaser. For aught that appears in the record neither the trustees nor the beneficiaries have released the defendant and his wife from liability on their notes. The receiver conveyed subject to the encumbrances; the defendant and his wife by signing the receiver's deed conveyed their equity of redemption. C. S., 4100. We do not perceive how in these circumstances the conveyance to the purchaser constitutes a foreclosure of the trusts either technically or substantially. By consenting to join in the conveyance on condition that the funds derived from the sale should be impressed with such right of homestead or inchoate right of dower as they might be entitled to, the defendant and his wife intended merely to substitute their interest in the funds for their interest in the conveyed property. If the conveyance to Hudson had not been made what would have been the wife's interest in her husband's estate? Of course, an inchoate right of dower. To determine the present value of this right under the rule given above it is essential to ascertain the property of which she would have been dowable if at the date of the conveyance she had been the survivor of her husband. She would then have been entitled to an estate for her life in one-third in value of all lands and of all legal rights of redemption and equities of redemption whereof her husband was seized at any time during the coverture, subject to all valid encumbrances made during coverture with her free consent. C. S., 4100. She would have lost her right to dower as against the trustees in the deeds of trust or those claiming under them *158
to the extent necessary to protect the security and no further; but as against other persons her dower rights would have been paramount. 19 C. J., 485, sec. 85 (2). This is so for two reasons: (1) the dower or right of dower may not be subjected during the widow's life to the payment of debts due from the estate of her husband (C. S., 4098); (2) if a wife joins her husband in the conveyance of her separate real estate to secure his debt or in the conveyance of his land, in which she has a right of dower, to secure his debt, the relation which she sustains to the transaction is that of surety; and if she survives him and the land is sold to satisfy the debt she becomes a creditor of his estate in an amount equal to the value of her dower. Purvis v. Carstaphan,
In Chemical Co. v. Walston,
Error. *159