Carolina Interstate Building & Loan Ass'n v. Black

25 S.E. 975 | N.C. | 1896

This action is brought to recover judgment for the amount of two notes signed by William E. Black and his wife Emma C. Black, and to foreclose two mortgages executed at the respective dates of the two notes, and purporting to convey the separate real estate of the wife to secure them. The answer sets up as a defense that the feme defendant was under the age of twenty-one when she signed the notes and mortgage, and was then, and has continued up to the present to be, under the additional disability of coverture. The jury found these averments of the answer to be true. The plaintiff relies by way of replication upon the facts afterwards found by the jury, that the feme defendant signed an application for the loan of the money that was the consideration of the note sued on, knowing that it contained a representation that she was twenty-one years old, and that her representation operated as a material inducement to plaintiff to make the loans. The jury further found in response to an issue that $175 of the money loaned on (326) the notes and mortgages was expended in discharging the lien of a mortgage of D. A. McDonald on the land embraced in the description in the mortgages sued upon.

The main contention of the plaintiff is that the feme defendant has become liable, and has subjected her property to the lien of the mortgages, not by force of the agreement to pay, but because she is estopped to deny the false and fraudulent representations that were the means of procuring the plaintiff's money. The plaintiff is the actor in this suit and seeks to recover on an alleged contract entered into by one at the time both an infant and a feme covert, and to subject her real property, conveyed under a deed executed while both disabilities existed.

1. If the feme defendant had been twenty-one years old she would have been incapable of entering into any "contract" to affect her real and *192 personal estate, except for her necessary personal expenses or for the support of her family, or such as were necessary in order to pay her debts existing before marriage without the written consent of her husband," unless she was a free trader under the provisions of the statute. Code, sec. 1826. The consent of the husband is not required at all where the obligation falls within the three foregoing exceptions. Flaum v. Wallace,103 N.C. 296.

2. In order to charge the wife's separate property where the assent of the husband is given, the intent to charge it must appear on the face of the instrument creating the liability, though the property to be subjected need not be specified. The assent of the husband, when given, does not enable the wife to make a contract, but to enter into an agreement in the nature of an executory contract. Wilcox v. Arnold, 116 N.C. 78; Bank v. Howell, 118 N.C. 271.

(327) 3. The wife can not subject her land or any separate interest therein, in any possible way, but by a regular conveyance executed according to the requirements of the statute. The law will not allow her, even though she be twenty-one years of age, to dispense with these necessary forms, and accomplish indirectly, either by silence or active participation in a fraud, what the Constitution, as construed by the courts, prohibits her from doing directly. Thurber v. LaRoque, 105 N.C. 301,311; Farthing v. Shields, 106 N.C. 289; Hughes v. Hodges,102 N.C. 236; Lambert v. Kinnery, 74 N.C. 348; Littlejohn v. Egerton,76 N.C. 468.

It follows, from the principles already stated, and which are sustained by abundant authority, that if the feme defendant had been of full age her agreements to pay money, embodied in the notes, would have been void, and had she been discovert and under twenty-one, those stipulations would have been, in the view most favorable to their enforcement, voidable. She could not have ratified a void agreement, and if either of them had been voidable only, the jury have found as a fact that there has been not attempt at affirmance since she attained her majority. There was no error, therefore, in refusing to render a personal judgment against her as an obligor to the notes. In re Freeman, 116 N.C. 199.

When the wife is of full age she may, by joining her husband in a deed executed as prescribed by law, subject her land to a lien to secure the husband's debt. Jeffrees v. Green, 79 N.C. 330; Newhart v. Peters,80 N.C. 166; In re Freeman, supra. But where her deed is void for failure to comply with the requirements of the Constitution, she can not, "by the indirect medium of an estoppel," created by her conduct, in pais, impart validity to it. Williams v. Walker, 111 N.C. (328) 604; Lambert v. Kinnery, Hughes v. Hodges; Thurber v. LaRoque, supra. *193

The feme defendant is not an actor here. The controversy hinges mainly upon the questions whether she has entered into a contract upon which a personal judgment can be recovered against her, and whether her separate real estate can be subjected under the mortgage deed. The prayer in the answer that the notes and mortgages be ordered to be surrendered and canceled does not give character to the action. That prayer is predicated upon the idea of a previous holding that these instruments are void as contracts or conveyances, and it could be withdrawn if necessary. The contention which confronts us before reaching that question is that thefeme defendant is estopped by her conduct from setting up her disability in avoidance of her deed. If she had come into a court where both the principles of law and equity are administered, seeking to repudiate her own promise because it was invalid as a contract, and at the same time refusing to surrender what she acquired as a consideration for that promise, the principle enunciated in Walker v. Brooks, 99 N.C. 207, and in Burns v.McGregor, 90 N.C. 222, would apply, and she would fail to find protection in the perpetration of the fraud by permitting her to retain the fruits of it, while she repudiated the supposed obligation incurred in order to acquire the money. The courts are not at liberty to violate the Constitution, even for the purpose of rectifying what is morally wrong and restoring to the rightful owner property acquired by resorting to unconscionable methods. Where the Constitution has imposed well-defined limits to the capacity of married women to contract, they can not by their own acts enlarge their powers. Bigelow on Estoppel, (3 Ed.), p. 51.

We have discussed the exceptions upon the theory that the plaintiff set up the fraud in pleadings by way of estoppel, though there seems to be some dispute as to whether the amendment to the (329) replication relating to the infancy of the feme defendant was ever allowed by the court. The plaintiff contends that, apart from the effect of coverture upon the validity of her promises and deeds, the female defendant was estopped as an infant from avoiding and repudiating the obligation of those instruments because she misled the plaintiff by the representation that she was twenty-one years old. It is a principle as old as the common law that agreements or attempted contracts of infants are voidable at the option of the infant on attaining his majority. It is expressly found here that there was no ratification, if such a thing had been possible where the double disability existed. But it is insisted that because she obtained money by false representations as to her age, she was estopped from denying her obligation to pay. If the courts should sanction this doctrine, the result would be that the ancient rule, established as a safeguard to protect infants from the wiles of designing rascals, would be abrogated, and the way opened up to reckless youths to *194 evade the law by lying. The courts would thereby put a premium upon falsehood and hold out the temptation to infants and to others, who hope to profit by debauching them, to resort to this disreputable method of enabling the one to squander and the other to extort the patrimony intended to prepare a child for future usefulness.

On the other hand, considering the defendant as a feme covert only, the fund expended in payment of a mortgage, of which we have no history, but which is found to have constituted a lien on her land, could not be followed upon the principle of subrogation, or any other principle, so as to subject her land. Where the wife is silent when the (330) husband expends money on her separate real estate, that fact in no way affects her title. Thurber v. LaRoque, supra.

If, however, it were conceded that she could not be protected on account of the disability of coverture against the claim of the plaintiff to be subrogated to the rights of the older mortgagee, her position as an infant who had neither ratified an express or implied promise, if made, to reimburse the plaintiff for any such expenditure, if made, would be impregnable. No person can compel an infant, who has not agreed to do so after attaining full age, to repay money expended for him officiously in the improvement of his land, no matter what the effect may have been.

For the reasons given, the judgment is

AFFIRMED.

Cited: Weathers v. Borders, 121 N.C. 388; McLeod v. Williams,122 N.C. 454; Weathers v. Borders, 124 N.C. 614; Zachary v. Perry,130 N.C. 291; Ball v. Paquin, 140 N.C. 92.

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