21 N.C. 524 | N.C. | 1837
"That said Zebulon, in his lifetime, held the said lands as the joint estate of himself and the plaintiff, but pretended that the plaintiff was greatly indebted to him, and said that he would convey to the plaintiff when he should settle and pay him up; whereas the plaintiff, as he believes, was not indebted to the said Zebulon in any sum, but upon a fair account of all the partnership moneys received, as aforesaid, and on other accounts not now known or remembered, the said Zebulon would be found largely indebted to the plaintiff."
It then charged that Zebulon Baird died, in March, 1824, intestate, leaving several children his heirs at law, who claim to hold the land in severalty as their own estate, in exclusion of the plaintiff, and have brought actions of trespass against the plaintiff's servants for cutting wood on the land by his direction; and that he also left a widow, and that David S. Swain administered on his personal estate; (526) all of which persons are made defendants. The prayer was "that *409 the defendants should answer all the allegations and charges of the bill, and set forth their titles, aforesaid, in such manner that the Court may see and examine the same; and that they account for such money as their intestate received, in which the plaintiff was a partner, and be decreed to pay the same and to give up said deeds to be canceled, or that they convey to the plaintiff as may seem just and equitable, and do whatever else is right in the premises.
The defendants put in answers, in which they stated that, in respect to many of the matters involved in the controversy, they had no personal knowledge, as they had occurred before they were born. It was admitted that a mercantile copartnership once existed between the three brothers — Andrew, Zebulon, and Beden Baird — from which, after some years, Andrew retired, and then the other two carried on the business jointly; that when Andrew retired the firm was indebted to him, and, after making him various payments, a balance was found due to him of $400 on 26 April, 1799, for which a bond was given, which was exhibited, and appeared to have been signed and sealed by Zebulon alone, for "self and Beden Baird," and that on this bond the judgment was had, which the plaintiff stayed, under the suspension law, and under which the sale by the sheriff took place, which was mentioned in the bill. The answer admitted that Zebulon and Beden Baird purchased lands with their joint funds, and took conveyances to them jointly, but denied that such purchases were independent transactions, distinct from the general mercantile copartnership, but stated that they were made in the course of the mercantile business for the purpose of promoting the same, and the price paid out of the funds of the firm. The answers further stated that the firm ceased to do business about the year 1800 or 1801, but that no settlement was made between the partners, as far as the defendants knew or believed; that each of the brothers, about that time, married and settled on farms or land which had been jointly purchased, which they had occupied and claimed in severally ever since; but it was admitted that those tracts of land afterwards (527) sold by the sheriff were not divided, but remained the joint property of the two. The defendants alleged that when the business ceased the firm was indebted to Zebulon Baird in the sum of £ 341 12s. 1d., according to a statement drawn up by Zebulon and found in his books after his death, to which were entered as credits the price received for such parts of the lands as had been sold before the purchase at sheriff's sale, leaving a balance of £ 287 12s. 1d.; that the plaintiff was also indebted to Zebulon in other sums, amounting to $793.57, according to the accounts of the latter; that Zebulon frequently applied to the plaintiff for a settlement of both accounts and to close their transactions, but that the plaintiff refused or declined coming to a settlement; that in *410 consequence thereof Zebulon determined that he would not discharge the debt due on the judgment recovered on the old debt of the partnership to Andrew Baird, but suffer the joint lands of the partners to be sold for it; that he was driven to this by the refusal of the plaintiff to pay it or any part of it, or to come to a settlement, because there was no other alternative but that or the payment by Zebulon himself, who was already in advance, both for the firm and to the plaintiff, as aforesaid; and that, under those circumstances, he suffered the land to be sold, and requested Candler to become the purchaser, who did so, and made payment with money furnished by Zebulon exclusively out of his own resources, and took a deed from the sheriff on 7 October, 1815, and conveyed to Zebulon on the 20th day of the same month.
The answers of the widow and heirs then insisted that Zebulon, immediately thereafter, entered into the whole of the land thus conveyed, claiming the whole in severalty as his own, and denying any right in the plaintiff; cleared parts of each tract, and built houses and made other improvements thereon; and sold parcels to sundry persons; and that he, and those claiming under him, held the exclusive possession (528) adversely during his lifetime and ever since, being more than seven years; and thereupon they relied on the act of 1715 for quieting old titles to land and for limitations of actions, and prayed the benefit thereof. The answers admitted the sales of land stated in the bill, but insisted that most of them were made after Zebulon's purchase and exclusive ownership; and that, of those made before, the price was either entered in the partnership books, or one moiety received by the plaintiff.
The defendants denied that they had any information of a sale of cattle to Paxton and Stevely, or of the receipt of any money thereon by Zebulon. They thought it probable that the firm did sell cattle, and that the sum of £ 76 9s. was received by him therefor, because, in the account of Z. and B. Baird with Zebulon Baird, left by the latter and already mentioned, he had credited the firm with that sum as received in "a county claim from John Paxton."
The defendants all stated that the plaintiff and Zebulon resided near each other throughout the whole period from the formation of their original copartnership up to the death of the latter, and that the plaintiff never set up any claim to the land after Zebulon's purchase, nor to the price of such parts as he sold, nor to any balance due from Zebulon to him on the partnership dealings, or on their private account; and thereupon the heirs insisted that the plaintiff was barred by his laches and lapse of time, especially as, since Zebulon's death, no person had the competent information to make a proper settlement; and the administrator insisted on the statute of limitations and also on the lapse of *411 time. The answer of the administrator admitted that, a short time before the death of Zebulon, he advised with him as a friend upon his title to the land in question, and, after showing him the deeds and stating his title as herein set forth, and being informed by the administrator (who was a gentleman of the bar) that, in his opinion, the title was good, Zebulon said, "if it was in his power to obtain a fair settlement he would greatly prefer it, because he did not believe the land would make him whole"; and he then showed him a statement, in writing (which the administrator annexed to his answer), purporting (529) to have been made in 1819, with a view to ascertain what sum the plaintiff's half of the land would stand him in, provided a settlement ever took place. In it the plaintiff's half of the judgment debt to A. Baird, with interest up to 1819, was stated at $735, his private debt on book account, $793.57, and interest thereon $786, amounting in the whole to $2,296.57; to which was appended a statement of the account of Z. and B. Baird with Zebulon, showing the balance, as before mentioned, due Zebulon, of £ 287 12s. 1d., as of November, 1809, without interest. The answer of the administrator also stated that he had advertised for creditors to bring forward their demands, according to the statute, and that he had fully administered by paying debts and delivering this surplus to the next of kin and taking refunding bonds; and prayed the benefit of the act of 1789. To the answers the plaintiff put in replications. The evidence established clearly, in the opinion of this Court, the mercantile partnership alleged in the answer, and that in the prosecution of it, various tracts of land were entered or purchased for the partnership, and conveyances taken in the joint names of Zebulon Baird and Beden Baird, among which were the lands sold by the sheriff and now in dispute; that the firm had no transactions of business after 1801 or 1802, but was never formally dissolved; and there was no evidence of a settlement between the partners, but, on the contrary, that Zebulon frequently expressed himself desirous of coming to a settlement, and claimed balances due to him up to the time of the sheriff's sale, and that the plaintiff declined it, but insisted that Zebulon had joint funds in his hands sufficient to discharge the debt of the firm to Andrew Baird, and for that reason forbid the sheriff's sale, at which he was present. There was also clear proof of the actual and exclusive possession of all the lands in dispute, by Zebulon and those claiming under him, from the year 1817 to the filing of the bill in 1827, claiming to hold the same in severalty, and during the whole (530) time under the title derived from the sheriff's sale, and adversely to the plaintiff and all other persons; and that during that period the plaintiff set up no title nor exercised any acts of ownership, except those mentioned in the decree of his Honor, hereinafter set forth; and also *412 that the plaintiff had resided in the same neighborhood, with his brother, was not on good terms with him, and was in easy circumstances from 1802 until the death of Zebulon, and has since continued to reside at the same place. One witness stated that the firm sold cattle to Paxton and Stevely, and that Zebulon, in 1803, had their note for the price, and took for it Buncombe County claims, but he was unable to state the amount. In other respects the evidence went only to the other facts declared in his Honor's decree, and, therefore, need not be stated further than to say that the parties exhibited and gave in evidence a patent from the State to Zebulon and Beden Baird for 400 acres of land, dated 6 December, 1799, and founded upon an entry made 19 March, 1794, and the sheriff's deed to Candler, and the deed from Candler to Zebulon Baird, of the dates mentioned in the answers; by the two latter of which two tracts of land were conveyed, of which one was part of the tract covered by the said patent.
At the opening of the cause on the hearing at Buncombe, on the last Spring Circuit, before his Honor, Judge Pearson, the counsel for the defendants stated that, from the nature of the issues between the parties, it was proper that they should be tried by a jury, and made that motion accordingly. But the court, thinking the intervention of a jury unnecessary, as no doubt was entertained upon the facts, refused the motion, and desired the counsel to confine their attention to the single question of law, "whether a tenant in common could, under any circumstances, acquire the title of his cotenant by execution sale?" The counsel for the defendants then proposed to examine the facts, with a view to insisting on the title of Zebulon Baird as being well constituted by the deed made to him by Candler, and the possession under it. But the (531) court declined hearing any argument, except on the above point of law, in the case.
Thereupon the court proceeded to declare that Zebulon Baird and Beden Baird were jointly indebted to Andrew Baird in the sum of $400, for which Zebulon executed his own bond, Beden refusing to join in the same, and alleging as the reason that Zebulon was in possession of funds with which he ought to pay the debt to said Andrew; that Andrew Baird assigned said debt to one Murphey, who recovered judgment thereon against said Zebulon for £ 241 3s. and costs, which was stayed by Beden Baird and another person becoming sureties for the suspension of the execution under the provisions of an act of Assembly then in force; that execution issued thereon against those three persons for £ 260 8s. 7d. and costs, and came to the hands of the sheriff of Buncombe County; and that he, at the instance and request of Zebulon Baird, and against the will of Beden Baird sold the land mentioned in the pleadings under the said execution, on 27 March, 1815, and the *413 same was bought by Zebulon Baird, through his agent, Z. Candler, at a sum sufficient to pay said debt, and the money was paid by said Zebulon, who afterwards procured the sheriff's deed to be made to said Candler on 7 October, 1815, who conveyed to said Zebulon on 25 October, 1815; and that at the time of the sale Zebulon and Beden Baird had each personal property sufficient to satisfy the execution, and that fact was known as well by the sheriff as by said Zebulon; that whether said Zebulon had funds with which the said debt ought to have been paid by him, as alleged in the bill, or whether the said Beden was then in arrears to Zebulon, as alleged in the answers, was not proved, and, therefore, the court declared that said Zebulon did not have such funds in his hands.
The court further declared that, after the execution of said deeds, the said lands remained unoccupied until the year 1817, and that then the said Zebulon made a lease to one John Palmer, who occupied a portion of each of the several tracts by cultivating the same, and (532) paid the rents to said Zebulon until the expiration of his lease, and thereupon another tenant occupied under Zebulon in the same way and paying him the rent; and therefore the court declared that the land was occupied by Zebulon, by means of tenants, from 1817, inclusive, to his death in 1824, and afterwards by the defendants, his heirs, up to the filing of the bill, during which time they received the rents. And the court declared further that during all the said time the said Beden made no call upon said Zebulon for any portion of the rents, and exercised no acts of ownership over the land, except that in 1820 he did forbid one Peter Stradley from cutting timber upon it; and that in the year 1826 he, the said Beden, cut wood on the land, for which he was sued in an action of trespass by the said heirs. The court further declared that, between the years 1817 and 1824, the said Zebulon sold and conveyed several parcels of said land and received the price as his own; and thereupon his Honor declared his opinion that there had not been an actual ouster of said Beden out of said lands by said Zebulon; and also that the defense relied on in the answers arising from the conveyances to Candler, and from him to said Zebulon, and the possession under them, was not valid, because that possession was not, in law, adverse; and, therefore, that the said sheriff's sale, and the deeds under it (if they have any effect at all) do, at most, only operate to transfer the right of said Beden, as a tenant in common, to said Zebulon in trust to secure the said Beden's part of the said debt for which the said land was sold; and that, with and subject to this encumbrance, the said Beden is entitled to have, hold and enjoy the said land, mentioned in the pleadings, as a tenant in common with the heirs at law of said Zebulon. And thereupon it was decreed that the plaintiff have, hold and enjoy the land mentioned in the pleadings, as a tenant in common *414 with the said defendants, the heirs at law of the said Zebulon; and that they, the said heirs at law, are liable to account with and pay over to the plaintiff the one-half of the rents, issues and profits received by (533) the said Zebulon or by themselves, and also one-half of all sums received by their said ancestor for the sales made by him; and that the plaintiff execute deeds of release to the several purchasers from the said Zebulon; and that partition of the said lands be made between the said tenants in common, whereby the plaintiff shall have one-half of the said lands in severalty, and that the plaintiff recover his costs from the said heirs at law, who are defendants; and that it be referred to the master to take the accounts and report how the balance stands, charging the said heirs at law as aforesaid, and crediting them with such part of said debt to A. Baird as the plaintiff ought to have paid, and interest thereon, and with the value of the timber cut by the plaintiff, and with the value of such permanent improvements as were made upon the land before the filing of the bill, and to state separately the value of such improvements as had been made since the filing of the bill.
The court further declared that the defendant David L. Swain, the administrator, had fully administered all the assets of his intestate, and also that the plaintiff's bill, as to him, was barred by the statute of limitations and length of time; wherefore, and because the plaintiff prayed no decree against him, the bill was dismissed as against said Swain, but without costs.
From this decree the other defendants were allowed to appeal to this Court. The pleadings do not appear to be so framed as to raise the questions which were considered in the court below to be involved, and on which his Honor declared his opinion. Yet, as this Court does not concur in the principles declared in the decree, and especially in their application to this case, it would be improper to dispose of the cause without some notice of them.
The case is treated in the decree as a partition cause, merely, by one tenant in common against another, in which the defendants set (534) up a sole seizin, first, by virtue of a conveyance of the title of the plaintiff by a sheriff's sale and deed, and, secondly, by virtue of a continued adverse possession of more than seven years under the color of a conveyance from Candler to their ancestor. The answer admits that Candler purchased at the sheriff's sale, as the agent of *415 Zebulon Baird, who was then cotenant with the plaintiff and took the conveyance as his trustee. His Honor was of opinion that one tenant in common could not purchase the share of his cotenant at execution sale, under any circumstances; and, therefore, that this purchase in the name of the trustee was a nullity and did not extinguish the tenancy in common at law, and certainly not in equity. It followed from that position that partition ought to be decreed, as if no such sale and conveyance had been made. We do not concur in those premises, nor in the conclusion. The Court is not aware of any decision that a tenant in common cannot, nor of any reason why he may not, purchase the interest of his fellow. Their estates are legal and several, the only union between them being that of possession. They do not hold in trust for each other. The rule is only that the possession of one eo nomine is the possession of the other, and that such a possession will, therefore, never bar his companion. But the relation between them is not such as to forbid one from purchasing from the other, upon the principle on which a court of equity regards with jealousy the dealings between persons who stand toward each other in a fiduciary capacity. These estates are so completely severed that, at common law, that of the one could not be passed to the other by release, but required a feoffment and livery of seizin. Why, then, should not one purchase the several estate of the other upon execution? There is nothing in the policy of the law against it. There might be a disadvantage to the debtor by judgment if the law excluded his companion from bidding, as he would probably give more than any other person. There may, indeed, be dealings between the parties themselves, upon which an accountability had arisen, as upon the receipt of too much of the profits by one, or outlays in common improvements, or the like, which would render it wrong, as (535) an undue advantage in one, to bring the share of the other to sale, upon which the court might hold the sheriff's deed to be only a security for the true balance that might be found upon a general account. But there is no principle of law which is violated by such a purchase; nor any principle of equity, either, in the case declared, and upon the evidence, properly declared, in the decree; that is to say, that the defendant's ancestor had no funds of the plaintiff in his hands, applicable to the debt, of which the plaintiff owed one-half; and that the purchase was made with the party's own money. If a third person have a judgment and execution against one of two tenants in common, his interest may unquestionably be sold, and the sale is valid against him, both in law and equity. His share is the subject of execution. And we cannot imagine a reason why his companion may not fairly, in such a case, be a bidder. So, if one tenant in common have a judgment against another, he may sell the share of the debtor. If he may not, *416 while others may, it will amount to the loss of his debt; for the judgment of the companion is not a specific encumbrance, or an equitable lien, which would follow the land in the hands of a purchaser under another execution, as a claim for outlays in improvements might. This case is somewhat different from either of those supposed, inasmuch as the execution was against both the tenants in common for a joint debt. But we cannot conceive that it calls for a different principle. Although the debt was joint, so that each was bound for the whole, yet, as between the parties, half the debt was the separate debt of each, regarding them merely as tenants in common. Suppose a judgment against heirs for the debt of the ancestor, can it be argued that one heir, in order to save his own estate, is bound to pay the whole debt and then wait to sue his coheir for contribution, and to have partition also made before he could have satisfaction? We think he could pay his own proportion of the debt, and then that the proportion of the other heir might be raised by the sale of his share eo nomine, at which the heir who had paid (536) his part might be a bidder. If so, his purchase of the whole undivided land must also be good; for, in effect, it is the same as paying his part of the debt first, and then buying his companion's share for his default. It is a very common case that one brother buys at sheriff's sale the undivided estate of another brother in descended lands, either for the debt of the ancestor or that of the brother himself, contracted after the father's death; and we believe the legality of such a purchase has never been questioned. It is a legal, several interest, and, as such, subject to execution; and the policy of the law is to invite bidders and exclude none but those whose duty it is, in a legal sense, to make the thing exposed to sale bring the best price. They are excluded because the interest of a purchaser is to get the thing at the least price, and is therefore directly opposed to this duty. But it is not the duty of one heir, or of one tenant in common, as such, to pay the debts of another heir or tenant in common, nor to aid in the sale of his estate by getting the best price for it, nor to refrain from buying it, to his own disadvantage, more than it is the duty of any other person wholly unconnected with them. Saunders v. Gatlin, ante, vol. 1, p. 86. For the only connection consists in the possession; and the estates are entirely disjoined. The Court, therefore, does not accede to the proposition laid down as a general one, and is of opinion that one tenant in common may fairly buy his companion's share at execution sale. The particular case now before us is precisely parallel to that of the two heirs. Supposing the transaction is a fair one, then the sale and conveyance were effectual to pass the plaintiff's title. No unfairness is imputed to it in the decree, and we find no evidence of it in the pleadings or depositions. The debt was originally equally due from both the *417 parties, legally and equitably. The brother, now deceased, gave a security for it, which, from its form, bound him only; but if he had paid it, the plaintiff would have been his debtor for one-half. Indeed, the debt of the plaintiff was not merged in the others' bond; but, being joint and several, the original creditor might still have sued him alone for the whole debt at law. When he made himself legally liable for the judgment, he did nothing more than he ought to have (537) done, equitably, and might, by another mode, have been forced to do in a court of law. Then, the evidence is clear that he refused to pay any part of the debt upon the false allegation that the debt was owing wholly by Zebulon Baird; and he even repeats that in his bill as the main and, as we think, sole ingredient of his claim to relief; and, indeed, it is one which could not have been resisted if it had been in fact true. Why was it said to be the debt of Zebulon alone? We find no reason given for it in the bill, except that Zebulon was indebted to Andrew Baird and gave him his bond. The case is then stated as the ordinary transaction between single persons who are debtor and creditor to each other. With that representation of it, the bill adds that the plaintiff became the surety of that debtor, and alleges that he "became liable only as surety." But upon the answers and depositions it is found that the plaintiff's allegation out of doors was altogether different; and that, admitting the debt to have been originally contracted by him and his brother as partners, he contended that the brother ought to pay it because he had partnership effects sufficient. In that sense only, according to the proofs, did the plaintiff denominate the debt as Zebulon's alone. But in that point the plaintiff has not offered any proof tending to sustain his position. Indeed, upon these pleadings, as will be mentioned more particularly hereafter, he could offer no such proof. Everything that appears on that point, however, indicates that the truth of the case is on the other side. If, then, the plaintiff in reality owed this debt jointly with his brother, and positively refused to pay any part of it, the creditor might have sold the plaintiff's share of the land if his codefendant had paid his proportion of the debt; or the sheriff might, justly, at the request of Zebulon, have raised the plaintiff's part of the debt out of his estate; and in either case, upon the principles we have mentioned, Zebulon Baird might have purchased. Such was virtually this transaction. Consequently, the tenancy in common was extinguished, as the plaintiff's estate passed by the sale and sheriff's deed.
Such being the effect of the sale, it becomes unnecessary to consider the character of the subsequent possession. The Court, however, does not entertain the opinion that an actual ouster, or disseizin in fact, is necessary to be shown in order to make the possession (538) *418 of one tenant in common adverse to another. It is true that possession, merely, or the silent sole perception of the profits, will not constitute adverse possession. But even that, continued without claim for a long time, will raise every presumption necessary for its sanction. Thomas v. Garvan, 4 Dev. Rep., 223. And we think that where one who has in fact but an undivided share is exclusively in possession under conveyances for the whole, and notoriously claiming the whole in severalty, the possession can no longer be regarded as the common possession, but must be deemed adverse.Burton v. Murphey, N.C. Term Rep., 259; Clapp v. Brougham, 9 Cowan, 530. More especially must this be true if the possession should be taken under color of a conveyance for the share of one of the cotenants, as such, though the conveyance might turn out to be ineffectual. Here the entry in 1817 by Zebulon was under the deed for the land sold as his own and as the plaintiff's. That possession could not be the common possession, for he claimed the plaintiff's share against him, and sold parts as sole owner; consequently the possession must be adverse. If the sale were irregular, or the execution defective, yet the deed was a good color of title, under which the possession for seven years ripened into an indefeasible title by the destruction of the plaintiff's right of entry.
In truth, however, these parties were not mere tenants in common. The answers state, and the evidence proves, that they were general mercantile partners, and that these lands were part of the partnership effects. Tate, the principal witness of the plaintiff, says that both the parties so informed him repeatedly. They were, therefore, joint tenants, as copartners. That fact, thus put in issue by the answers and replication, ought to have been declared in the decree. If it had been declared, it must have put an end to the supposed tenancy in common, and the right supposed to be asserted to partition of these particular lands as being held in common or in joint tenancy simply. There (539) can be no division of partnership property until all the accounts of the partnership have been taken and the clear interest of each partner ascertained. Partners do not necessarily hold equally. They hold according to the sums they are respectively entitled to receive from the common stock. The usual decree is to sell everything and turn all into money for a division. But if the partners are made equal out of other effects, and then land remains, they may, no doubt, be specifically divided. That, however, cannot be known until the partnership accounts have been settled between the parties or taken under the order of the court. The bill in this case does not allege a settlement, nor as much as allude to the partnership itself, but seems purposely to evade it. The accounts of the partnership, therefore, could not be taken under it. If they were taken, and Zebulon found to be a creditor of the firm, as *419 alleged by him, the lands would undoubtedly be liable for the general balance due to him, and not merely for half the sum advanced by him on the sheriff's sale. Consequently it was indispensable to take the accounts to do justice between the parties. As that could not be done upon these pleadings, it was a complete answer to the bill when it appeared that the land in question and the debt for the cattle were items, merely, in the assets of the mercantile concern. A partner cannot demand an account in respect of particular items, and a division of particular parts of the property; but the account must necessarily embrace everything, for the reasons just mentioned. It may be said that, after such a length of time, a bill for an account of the partnership would be barred and a settlement or satisfaction presumed, and, therefore, that these lands may be taken as a clear surplus remaining and divisible equally between the parties as joint tenants simply. That may be admitted, for we think it correct, provided it appear that the partners were equally interested; and provided further that the lands continued to be treated by the parties as joint property, in which each was equally concerned. But that is not our case. The ancestor of the defendants and the plaintiff each denied an equal interest in the other. The plaintiff alleged that his brother had other funds of the firm in his hands, which rendered him a debtor to the plaintiff, while (540) Zebulon insisted that both the firm and the plaintiff were indebted to him, and for each balance looked to these lands as a security. It may be true that Zebulon could not enforce his claim by a bill for an account at so late a day as 1827, when this bill was filed. But if the plaintiff would lie by until his copartner could not have the accounts between them taken, by reason of the staleness of the demand, surely it must, for the same reason, be too late for the plaintiff to claim a division of the specific lands, in character of joint tenant simply, and without taking the accounts and avoid these conveyances by which while they stand, the joint tenancy is extinguished, and the land become vested in severalty in the other party. From the time the parties ceased to treat this land as common property, it could no longer be looked on in a court as mere real estate belonging to them equally, for the purpose of partition, in the light now spoken of. It may be, indeed, that the plaintiff, after such unreasonable laches, and upon a suit brought after the death of his partner, who alone could adjust the accounts with an accuracy at all satisfactory, ought not to have a decree upon any other principle than allowing the accounts as stated and left by his deceased partner. But whether that be so or not, the delay will not, in the case which has happened, exempt him from the necessity of the account and authorize partition without taking it; for this land was not regarded by either party as common property, but it was claimed, possessed and disposed *420 of as the sole property of one of them for such a length of time and under such circumstances as in a case of a tenancy in common, would be evidence of an ouster and make a title under the statute of limitations; and, perhaps, also, for like reasons, would terminate the trust between the parties as partners, and, in this Court, in analogy to the rule at law, put the statute of limitations in motion on behalf of the possessor. At all events, the plaintiff cannot rely on his own laches to excuse him from the account of the partnership and authorize (541) him to call for a division of these estates as remaining specifically of the assets of the partnership.
But in reality the pleadings present neither of the questions that have been discussed, and no relief can be granted but upon the facts alleged in the bill and such as is consistent with those allegations and the prayer founded on them. This bill is as meager in its allegations as can well be imagined, and as limited in the prayer as possible. It sets forth no general partnership, and of course asks for no account of it. "The partnership moneys" mentioned in it are necessarily confined to the sums of $551 and $1,470, previously spoken of, as the prices of a lot of cattle sold by the two, and of parts of the land jointly owned, which were sold by Zebulon. Those transactions are set forth as merely isolated transactions of limited joint dealings and in no way connected with a general partnership. The draftsman of the bill did not mean that his client should submit to a general account in order to get a moiety of the lands, but the intention was to get it without the account. The partnership was, therefore, purposely kept out of sight. Upon those transactions, as stated, the plaintiff had no claim upon the heirs of Zebulon, but only against the personal estate into which the money had gone; and from the payment of it, as money had and received, the administrator was properly held to be protected by the statute of limitations. It is not seen why that matter was put into the bill, which was to pray the relief sought in respect of the land, but as a pretense under which evidence might be given to establish that the debt to Andrew Baird ought to have been paid by Zebulon, although it was originally against both. But it cannot have the effect of admitting proof with that view, since the charges of the bill on that point are precise, that the debt was never that of the plaintiff, except as suretyonly for Zebulon.
Then the case stated with respect to the land is nothing more than that those parties purchased lands jointly and held them jointly, and that Zebulon became indebted and the plaintiff became his surety, (542) and that, upon a joint judgment gainst [against] them therefor, Zebulon procured the land of the plaintiff to be sold, and indirectly purchased it himself. The bill further alleges, indeed, that Zebulon set up, *421 as a very insufficient pretense for such manifest bad faith and wrong, that the plaintiff was indebted to him, which pretense, the bill states, was altogether unfounded, for, "upon an account of all the partnership moneys received as aforesaid," the balance was the other way. This shows what partnership was in the mind of the pleader; "as aforesaid" referring particularly to the two sums before mentioned as the prices of cattle and land sold. As for the other words in this part of the bill, respecting moneys received "on other accounts not now known or remembered," they must be admitted to be too vague for any purpose. The charge respecting those moneys, so far as it is connected with relief in respect of the title of the land, is introduced merely to repel the pretense of Zebulon of the plaintiff's indebtedness to him on other accounts. It is true that, for the reasons before given, neither party has proved, nor could prove, in this cause, on which side the indebtedness was, since it arose on general partnership dealings, which cannot here be inquired into. It may be taken, however, either way, and it will not affect the rights of the parties in respect of the land upon the questions made here; for whatever sum the plaintiff might have owed to Zebulon, it would be a plain and gross fraud in the latter to sell, or procure to be sold, the plaintiff's land for a debt of Zebulon, for which the other was bound merely as surety, and to become the purchaser himself. Such a case could not receive the least countenance in a court of justice; but the plaintiff would be entitled to relief against such abuse of his confidence, and of the process of the law, without any regard to the land being before held in severalty by him, or jointly by Zebulon and himself. The slightest inspection of the bill shows that such is the gravamen, and solely the gravamen, of the plaintiff's case, as stated in it. It is true, there are general words of the sale of the plaintiff's moiety being "unjust, iniquitous, and fraudulent." But epithets of that sort are unmeaning and impertinent in pleading, unless they be used in reference to facts stated, which render, (543) and whereby it may appear that the act complained of is legally fraudulent. In other words, the facts constituting the fraud must be alleged before proof of them can be received or the court act on the general allegation. Here the only facts stated are those mentioned, namely, that the principal debtor contrived to have the land of the surety sold under the execution, and purchased it himself. That turns out to be untrue, for the debt was originally a joint one, and there is nothing appearing, or can appear, in this suit to show that the joint property of the debtors ought not to have been sold to satisfy it, or that the several property of the plaintiff ought not to have paid one-half of it. That being established, the plaintiff's case, as made in his bill, was answered, and the bill should have been dismissed. Here may be noticed *422 that part of the decree which declares that each of the parties had personal property sufficient to satisfy the execution, as was known to the sheriff and Zebulon Baird. That would be material evidence of one species of fraud. But it would be one entirely different from that brought forward by the plaintiff, and is not suggested in the bill. The Court could not, therefore, act on it. The fraud here complained of consists of one man's selling the property of another for a debt which the former alone owed, and his buying it and holding it from his surety. That the view of the bill here taken is correct is confirmed by a recurrence to the relief prayed in respect of the land. It is not for a sale as partnership property, nor for a division as of lands held jointly or in common. Partition was not in the contemplation of the writer, for the bill does not even describe or identify the lands. He conceived that the joint estate was extinguished by the sale and deeds; and his object, so far from being a partition, was to restore the original character of the estate as it was before the sale, and that was his sole object. The prayer is for a discovery of the titles set up by the defendants for the lands which the sheriff had sold, that the Court may see whether they correspond with those stated by the bill; and if so, that the defendants (544) may be decreed "to give up the sheriff's and Candler's deeds to be canceled, or may convey to the plaintiff." Here is not a glance of thought towards a partition. The sole relief sought is that the deeds may be declared void, as being fraudulent, upon the single ground mentioned in the charging part of the bill, and that thereupon they may be put out of the plaintiff's way, either by cancellation or a reconveyance, the effect of which would be to let him, unless otherwise barred, get into possession again, or to consider the possession held by the other as a common possession. It seems to the Court, therefore, that all that was done in the court below was out of the case, and that the proper decree in respect of the land would have been to declare that the debt on which it was sold was not the several debt of Zebulon Baird, but the joint debt of him and the plaintiff, and, therefore, that the plaintiff had not provedthe fraud alleged by him, and upon which he claimed to have the deeds declared void, and thereupon to have dismissed the bill with costs. The money received for land sold by Zebulon since the purchase at sheriff's sale stands on the same ground with the land itself, and therefore the bill ought to be dismissed as to that also. The other moneys — that is to say, those received for land previously sold, and for the cattle — have already been disposed of, upon the ground that they are general partnership assets, or that the administrator was alone liable for them, and is protected by the statute of limitations. As the decree pronounced was not final, and the cause remains in the Court of Equity, this Court cannot reverse it and pronounce such decree *423 here as ought to have been made; but this opinion must be certified to the Court of Buncombe, that the former decree may be there reversed and one entered in conformity to the directions now given. The plaintiff must also pay the costs in this Court.
PER CURIAM. Direct accordingly.
Cited: Wells v. Mitchell,
(545)