8 S.E.2d 807 | N.C. | 1940
Controversy without action to determine the rights of the plaintiff, widow, in the proceeds of a sale to make assets to pay debts.
Alfred W. Brown, husband of the plaintiff, died testate, seized and possessed of several parcels of land. Plaintiff dissented and claimed her statutory interest in his estate. *556
Several of the parcels of land of which the testator died seized and possessed were encumbered by mortgages or deeds of trust in which the plaintiff had joined her husband as a grantor, thereby conveying her dower interest as security for the respective debts. These liens have been foreclosed. Neither parcel so foreclosed brought any surplus in excess of the indebtedness due thereon.
All personal property not allotted to the plaintiff as her year's allowance has been exhausted and the estate of the testator is insolvent.
Claims, exclusive of the claim of the plaintiff, aggregating approximately $6,000 have been filed with and allowed by the defendant.
The defendant instituted a special proceedings to sell the unencumbered land to make assets to pay debts. One parcel has been sold and plaintiff contends that her claim in the agreed sum of $2,126.84, based on her loss of dower in the encumbered land, is entitled to priority in payment out of the proceeds of said sale and out of the proceeds of the sale of the other unencumbered land.
The court below held, as a matter of law, that plaintiff is not entitled to any preference in payment over the other unsecured creditors out of the proceeds of the sale of the unencumbered land and entered judgment accordingly. The plaintiff excepted and appealed. It being admitted that the plaintiff has received the present cash value of her dower interest in the unencumbered land and that the estate of her husband is insolvent, the only question presented here is what is the status of her claim for reimbursement for the value of her dower interest in the encumbered land sold under mortgage signed by her — that is, is her claim preferred as against the claims of unsecured creditors and is she entitled to priority in payment out of the proceeds from the sale of unencumbered land to make assets?
Where a husband with the joinder of his wife has conveyed his land as security for a debt and after his death the lien is foreclosed and the land is sold under the mortgage or trust deed for an amount in excess of the debt, the widow's right of dower attaches to the excess fund arising from the sale and has priority as to such fund over the claims of unsecured creditors, for such surplus pro hac vice is still to be deemed real estate.Chemical Co. v. Walston,
The widow may, if she so elects, require the mortgagee to sell the two-thirds of the land not embraced in the dower and the reversion of the dower, apply the proceeds to the payment of the mortgage and then file claim for the residue of the debt as an unsecured claim against the *557
general estate of the deceased. If the ratable payment on this claim out of the general assets is insufficient to pay the balance due, then and only then may the mortgagee foreclose the dower interest. Thus, she may, if she desires, protect her dower in the encumbered land. Creecy v. Pearce,
When the plaintiff joined her husband in the conveyance of his land in trust to secure his debts she joined for the purpose of conveying her dower and in so doing she became his surety to the extent of the value of her dower interest in the land. Purvis v. Carstaphan,
The weakness in the position of the plaintiff lies in the fact that she is proceeding upon the assumption that she still possesses dower in the encumbered land which has been foreclosed and that her claim for the value thereof retains the status of dower. Whereas, when she suffered the land to be sold under foreclosure her dower was conveyed as authorized by the lien executed by her and she has lost all interest in such land. She is now nothing more than a surety seeking reimbursement for the loss she has sustained by reason of the fact that her property has been sold to pay the debt of her husband. Being a surety whose property has been sold to pay the debt of her principal she, in law, has a claim against her husband's estate, which claim stands in the same category as would the unsecured claim of the mortgagee.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed. *558