Doe on the Demise of Campbell v. Baker

51 N.C. 255 | N.C. | 1858

CASE AGREED.

The lessors of the plaintiff are the heirs of Peter J. Campbell, and James S. Campbell, and Elizabeth Campbell, widow of the said James. They claim title to the land by a deed from James S. Campbell, the former owner, to the said Peter J. Campbell, which was made on 17th of March, 1825, on the eve of a marriage, about to take place between the said James and the said Elizabeth, then Elizabeth Pilley. By this deed, the land in question, with other property, real and personal, is conveyed to the said Peter J. Campbell, in trust, for the sole and separate use of the said Elizabeth, and then in trust for the children of the marriage. The defendant admitted possession. To estop the defendant, the plaintiff exhibited the records of a petition in the Court of Equity of Cumberland county, by "James S. Campbell, Peter J. Campbell, trustee, Elizabeth Campbell, the wife of James Campbell, Anna Maria, Henry S., Delphia L., William Alivier, and Thomas James Campbell, children of the said James S. and Elizabeth Campbell, by their next friend, Thomas S. Campbell, setting out the said deed, and the seizin in trust, by the said Peter, and praying that the land in question, and some other property, might be sold for a reinvestment, also a decree of sale — a report of the clerk and master of a sale to James S. Campbell, and a decree that the clerk and master make title. A deed was also produced from the clerk and master to Daniel Baker, and from him to the defendants. The defendants then produced an assignment by James S. Campbell, of his *257 bid at the master's sale, to Daniel Baker, who paid the money bid into the office.

The plaintiffs produced no other evidence of the title of Peter J. Campbell.

It was admitted that the defendants were in possession when the suit was brought.

Upon this case agreed, his Honor being of opinion with the plaintiffs, gave judgment accordingly, from which the defendant appealed. The title derived by the defendant, under the sale and deed made by the clerk and master, was impeached in the argument on two grounds. The first is, that the purchase was made by James S. Campbell, and, by his order the deed was made to Baker. The objection is founded on the idea, that the master has a special authority to convey under the decree and the statute, and the decree is for a conveyance to the "purchaser" at the master's sale; and that, therefore, it must be to him alone. But the language of the acts, directing sheriffs to convey land sold under execution, is much the same, and it has been frequently decided, that a conveyance to another, by the direction of the purchaser, was sufficient to pass the land; Smith v.Kelly, 3 Murph. 507; Testerman v. Poe, 2 Dev. and Bat. 103. The Court thinks this case stands on the same reason with those. It is a question between the purchaser and the master and his bargainee; and, if the conveyance was improperly made, application to correct it, should be made by the purchaser to the court of equity, which made the order for the conveyance.

The second ground is, that the petition, for the sale of the land, was filed in the name of the infants, by their next friend, whereas, it ought to have been in the name of their guardian. If this objection were well founded, generally, it could not have any effect in this action, because these infants had not *258 the legal title to the land, but it was in their trustee, who was also a party to the petition. But the Court is of opinion that it could not, in any case, affect the title. We will not say that a sale, under a petition in the guardian's own name, would not be good. The act may, by force of its terms, sustain it, and, generally speaking, it seems unsafe to decree a sale of the land of infants, except on the application of the guardian, as a responsible person, under bonds for his fidelity. But, certainly, if the guardian does apply, it is most regular and proper that the petition should be in the name of the infants themselves, by him as guardian; because the title is in them, and the statute makes the decree and deed pass the title vested in the parties to the suit. Nor do we think that the sale is vitiated by the fact, that the petition is in the names of the infants by a next friend. In the first place, it is the course of the court of equity to sustain suits by infants by prochein ami, without regard to their guardianship, because he is under the control of the court, and, if he misdemeans himself in conducting the case, the court, being charged with the care of the infants, will remove him and appoint a fit person to protect the infants; and the statute, in authorising the court of equity to act on the application of the guardian, is not to be considered as ousting the prior jurisdiction of the court, or changing its usual course of proceeding. This is believed to have been constantly the understanding of the profession, and it would be mischievous, at this day, to hold otherwise, as many titles are derived under decrees upon petitions brought in the names of infants by their next friend, or their guardian. But, at all events, the regularity of the proceedings in the court of equity cannot be called in question here; but that court is the exclusive judge of its own course, and its determination conclusive as to every matter within its jurisdiction. That subject was, however, so fully considered in the case ofWilliams v. Harrington, 11 Ired. 616, as not to require further observation now. Upon the ground taken in the argument, therefore, the opinion of the Court is against the plaintiff. *259

There is another point, however, which is not so clear, and on which the Court has felt considerable difficulty. This is not a case of a sale of the land of tenants in common for partition, nor of infants seized of the land. The title was vested in a trustee for Mrs. Campbell during her life, and then for her children, the infants, who have now arrived at full age, and with the heirs of the trustee, are the lessors of the plaintiff. The purpose of the proceedings in Equity was to obtain a sale of the premises, with the avowed object of investing the proceeds in other real estate, and the bill was brought by the trustee, Mrs. Campbell and her children. Our doubt has been, whether the conveyance of the trustee himself was not necessary to pass his legal title, as the case is not literally within any of the acts of Assembly which direct the sales of land and authorise the master or a commissioner to convey, under the direction of the Court. It is not questioned, that the court of equity may change investments in trust for a married woman, or for infant cestuis que trust, and that it is proper the trustee should be a party to the cause; and it is not supposed that a court of law can question the decree as to its correctness upon the rights of the parties to it. But as a decree, properly, is in personam, and does not divest the legal title, a doubt arose, whether the title of the trustee could be passed but by his own deed. The question is not free of difficulty. But, after some hesitation, the Court holds that the deed of the master is sufficient. The ground on which we go, is, that the Court might have decreed that the trustee should convey, and his deed would have been sufficient; and that the act of 1836, Rev. Code, ch. 32, sec. 23, enacts that in all cases of a sale under a decree of a court of equity, where the master shall be authorised by a decree in the cause to convey, his deed shall be effectual to convey to the purchaser such title, interest and estate, as the party of record owning the same had therein; which seems to be broad enough to cover every case. *260

The judgment must therefore be reversed and judgment rendered for the defendant, on the case agreed.

PER CURIAM, Judgment reversed.