3 S.E. 638 | N.C. | 1887
The plaintiffs are creditors of the husband defendant, and it appears that the latter being insolvent, purchased the tract of land described in the complaint at the price of $3,500; that of this price he paid the sum of $1,600, and with the view to defraud and in fraud of his creditors, he procured the title to the land to be made to his wife, the feme
defendant, and he and she at once executed a mortgage of the same (191) to the defendant W. H. Johnson to secure the balance of the purchase money mentioned. The husband and wife insisted that notwithstanding the fraud as ascertained by the verdict of the jury, they were entitled to a homestead in the land and personal property exemption, subject to the mortgage referred to. The court gave judgment for the plaintiffs, allowing a personal property exemption of $500 to the husband. The husband and wife having assigned error, appealed to this Court.
It was decided in Crummen v. Bennet,
The husband defendant had the right to purchase the land in question, and having done so, and paid $1,600 of the purchase money, he at once became entitled to a homestead in it, subject to the charge of the balance of the purchase money remaining unpaid, and debts as to which the homestead is not exempt from execution or other final process, as pointed out in Mebane v. Layton,
If the husband defendant had not employed the money he had in the purchase of the land, he might have been entitled to the personal property exemption to be taken out of it, but he chose to employ the money in the purchase of the land — he thus turned it into real estate, and thereby precluded himself from the right to the personal property exemption to be assigned out of it. The money ceased to be personal property of the defendant — he turned it into land, as he had the right to do. He was therefore entitled to the homestead and not to the personal property exemption. And as to the homestead, that was a matter between the husband defendant and his wife, to whom he caused the conveyance to be made.
There is error. Let this opinion be certified to the Superior Court, to the end the judgment may be modified in conformity with it, and as thus modified, affirmed.
Error. Reversed.
Cited: McCanless v. Flinchum, post, 373; Thurber v. LaRoque,
(193)