128 S.E. 494 | N.C. | 1925
From judgment sustaining demurrer ore tenus to his complaint, on the ground that no cause of action is set out therein, plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court. *15 The facts alleged in the complaint are as follows: On 21 May, 1909, in consideration of one thousand dollars, the Engle Land Company conveyed to plaintiff, by deed, a lot of land situate in the city of Winston-Salem. Plaintiff immediately went into possession of said lot and within three months thereafter constructed thereon a large dwelling-house which he has continuously, since 1909 to the present time, occupied as his home. During the fall of 1919 plaintiff placed a house on said lot and made thereon many improvements, which have greatly enhanced its value. These improvements were made in good faith by plaintiff, relying upon his belief, bona fide, that he had a good, indefeasible and unencumbered title to said lot. On 6 June, 1923, plaintiff conveyed a portion of said lot to the Burkhead Methodist Church, South, by deed containing full covenants of warranty. Said church thereafter erected a parsonage on the portion of the lot conveyed to it, at a cost of approximately nine thousand dollars. Plaintiff's possession of said lot has been open, adverse, notorious, and exclusive, from and since the date of his deed from the Engle Land Company. This deed was dated 21 May, 1909, and was duly registered in Forsyth County on 9 September, 1924. At the date of the execution of said deed, Lindsay Patterson, a lawyer, residing in Winston-Salem, of high standing and repute, both morally and financially, was the president of the Engle Land Company and the owner of practically all of the stock of said company. Plaintiff, relying upon the friendly and cordial relations existing between the said Patterson and himself, and upon his confidence in him, did not register his deed, at the time he received it, and thereafter forgot that he had failed to do so, until September, 1924.
Defendants are judgment creditors of plaintiff's grantor, the Engle Land Company. Their judgments were obtained against the Engle Land Company and Lindsay Patterson, and were duly docketed on the judgment docket of the Superior Court of Forsyth County, during the year 1922. These judgments, aggregating, with interest, about twelve thousand dollars, were all docketed prior to the date of the registration of the deed of the Engle Land Company to plaintiff. The indebtedness upon which each of the judgments was obtained was incurred subsequent to 1 January, 1917, and was the indebtedness of Lindsay Patterson and not of the Engle Land Company; credit was extended by defendants to him and not to the company. He completely dominated and controlled the affairs and policies of the company, using the name of the company as a party to the obligations upon which judgments were rendered, as a form. At the time the obligations were incurred to defendants, said *16 company owned an inconsiderable amount of property, having theretofore disposed of practically all its property, consisting of land, which Patterson, through said company, had put on the market for sale.
The value of the land, less the enhanced value thereof by reason of said improvements, is substantially less than the amount of the docketed judgments of defendants, and is not in excess of six thousand dollars, whereas the value of the property, with the improvements, is substantially in excess of the sum of six thousand dollars.
Two of defendants have caused, and the others, unless restrained by order of court, will cause executions to be issued upon the said judgments in their favor to the sheriff of Forsyth County; and said sheriff has advertised for sale, for the satisfaction of said judgments, all the right, title and interest of the Engle Land Company in and to said land. Plaintiff prays judgment, first, that defendants be restrained and enjoined from proceeding further with the executions issued and now in the hands of the sheriff and from suing out further executions upon said judgments, and that said judgments be canceled and declared null and void as to the land described in the complaint; and second, that if the court shall adjudge that said judgments are liens upon said land, upon payment by plaintiff into the office of the clerk of the Superior Court of Forsyth County of such sum as may be adjudged as the value of said land, less the enhanced value by reason of the improvements, each and all said judgments, in so far as the land described in the complaint is concerned, be canceled.
No answer to the complaint has been filed by defendants; upon the hearing of a motion by plaintiff, for the continuance of a temporary restraining order to the trial, defendants demurred, ore tenus, to the complaint. By the demurrer, defendants admit the facts to be as alleged in the complaint; Hayman v. Davis,
Plaintiff's deed, registered 9 September, 1924, is not valid as a conveyance by the Engle Land Company, of the land described therein, as against defendants, creditors of Engle Land Company, whose claims have been reduced to judgments. C. S., 3309. The land described in the deed, not having been conveyed to plaintiff, as against defendants, was the real property of the Engle Land Company at the date of the docketing of the judgments. The judgments, docketed on the judgment docket of the Superior Court of Forsyth County, are liens upon said land. C. S., 614. They were liens on said land at date of the registration of plaintiff's deed, and plaintiff's title, under the deed as a conveyance, *17
is subject to the liens of the judgments. Wimes v. Hufham,
The fact that defendants recovered judgments not only against the Engle Land Company, but also against Lindsay Patterson, and that the indebtedness upon which the judgments were recovered was his indebtedness, and not that of the company, as alleged in the complaint and admitted by the demurrer, cannot be held to affect the validity of the judgments, or the right of defendants to enforce the same, by execution and sale of the real property of the Engle Land Company, upon which the judgments are liens. Nor is the validity of the liens affected by the fact that the indebtedness upon which the judgments were rendered was incurred subsequent to 1 January, 1917, at which time plaintiff had been in possession of the land under an unregistered deed for more than seven years. There is no allegation that the judgments were void, for want of jurisdiction, or that they were procured by fraud, or that the indebtedness upon which they were rendered was fraudulent. Defenses which may have been made by the Engle Land Company before judgment, are not now available to said company or to plaintiff;Brown v. Harding,
Plaintiff, conceding that, upon the record, his deed is not a valid conveyance of the land by the Engle Land Company as against defendants, judgment creditors, whose judgments were docketed prior to the registration of the deed, contends that he had title to said land at time the judgments were docketed, by possession, for seven years, under the unregistered deed, as color of title. C. S., 428. The facts of possession, and of the requisite duration of such possession, prior to the docketing of the judgments, are admitted. This contention, therefore, presents the question as to whether an unregistered deed of the judgment debtor is color of title to the land described therein as against a judgment creditor whose judgment has been duly docketed, and thus becomes a lien on the land described in the deed.
Both plaintiff, the grantee in the unregistered deed, and defendants, judgment creditors, whose docketed judgments are liens on the land, claim from a common source, to wit, the Engle Land Company. Under *18 C. S., 3309 no conveyance of land is valid as against creditors or purchasers for value, but from the registration thereof.
In Collins v. Davis,
In Janney v. Robbins,
In Moore v. Johnson,
Counsel for plaintiff, in their very helpful brief, concede the law to be settled that with respect to purchasers for a valuable consideration from a common grantor, who record their deeds, the unregistered deed of a prior purchaser is not color of title. Possession, therefore, under an unregistered deed, although of the requisite kind and for the requisite duration, will not bar the grantee in a subsequent deed, who is a purchaser for value, from the same grantor, and who has duly registered his deed.Buchanan v. Hedden,
No distinction is made in the statute (C. S., 3309) or in the opinions of this Court, construing and applying the statute, between creditors and purchasers for value. No conveyance of land is valid to pass any property from the donor or grantor, as against either creditors or purchasers for value, but from the registration thereof. As to a purchaser for value, who has recorded his deed, it has been held that a prior deed from the same grantor, unregistered, does not exist, as a conveyance or as color of title. We can discover no principle and no authority which requires or justifies such distinction in the construction or application of the statute as will support plaintiff's contention.
We, therefore, hold that where there are conflicting claims to land, between a judgment creditor of the grantor and his grantee, although for a valuable consideration, whose deed is dated prior to but not registered at the date of the docketing of the judgment, the unregistered deed is not color of title as against the judgment creditor, and possession thereunder, although of the requisite kind and for the requisite duration, will not bar the judgment creditor from selling under execution the land described in the deed, as the real property of the judgment debtor.
There was no error in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint, in so far as plaintiff relies upon the facts alleged therein as supporting his first prayer for relief; the docketed judgments of defendants are valid liens upon the land described in the complaint; plaintiff is not entitled to judgment that defendants be restrained from subjecting all the right, title and interest of the Engle Land Company in and to said land by sale, under execution to the payment of said judgments. *20
Plaintiff contends, however, that the demurrer should not have been sustained, for that he is entitled, in this action, to relief in accordance with his second prayer for judgment, to wit, that the value of the land, at the date of the docketing of the judgments, when they became liens thereon, should be determined, exclusive of the amount by which same was enhanced by the improvements made by him, while in possession, in good faith, relying upon his unregistered deed, and that upon the payment by him of the amount of such value, into court, to be applied on said judgment, the land should be released from the liens of same. Defendants rely upon Tarboro v. Micks,
In that case, Battle Bryan, in consideration of $3,300, on 27 December, 1887, conveyed by deed to plaintiff a lot of land; plaintiff by the erection thereon of a handsome and commodious public hall greatly enhanced the value of said lot; at Spring Term, 1888, of the Superior Court of Edgecombe County, a judgment owned by defendant was rendered against Bryan and duly docketed; plaintiff's deed was registered 10 January, 1910. Plaintiff sought to restrain defendant from selling said lot under execution upon said judgment, claiming the right to compensation for betterments. The court below was of the opinion "that defendant, the owner of the judgment, has the right to treat the conveyance dated 27 December, 1887, as not having been made until the date of its registration, — 10 January, 1910 — without regard to the question of notice; that, as for plaintiff's right to compensation for betterments, the same can be adjusted when the purchaser at execution sale brings his action of ejectment; that plaintiff having an adequate legal remedy, is not entitled to extraordinary relief by way of injunction, and that the restraining order herein issued be vacated." Upon the appeal, this Court said: "We can see no error in the rulings of his Honor." This case is determinative of the instant case, certainly in so far as plaintiff relies for relief upon C. S., Art. 29, ch. 12, known as the "Betterments Statute." C. S., 699 etseq. There was no error in holding that plaintiff is not entitled to relief under this statute. He cannot, clearly in this action, avail himself of its provisions. The language of the statute and the decisions of this Court forbid. Trust Co. v. Sterchie,
The facts of the instant case appeal so strongly to the conscience of the Court that we are reluctant to hold that the court was without power to afford any relief to plaintiff upon the facts alleged by him and now admitted, upon the demurrer, by defendants. We should be glad to emulate the wisdom of Portia, who in rendering judgment in the action pending before her, gave to plaintiff who "craved the law" his "pound of flesh," but no more. *21
Defendants, as judgment creditors of the Engle Land Company, are entitled to have, in satisfaction of their judgments, the proceeds of the sale, under execution, of all the right, title and interest of their judgment debtor in and to the land, upon which the judgments are liens. C. S., 677. The sheriff's deed would pass to the purchaser at the execution sale all the right, title and interest which the Engle Land Company had not conveyed, as against defendants, to plaintiff by his deed which was unregistered; C. S., 698, 671; and which, notwithstanding said deed, remained in said company. Said purchaser would also acquire all rights of defendants in said land; Fibre Co. v. Cozad,
In Wood v. Tinsley,
Defendants, however, are not purchasers for value from the Engle Land Company; they have no estate in said land; they have only liens, which may be enforced by sale under execution. Bruce v. Nicholson,
It has been held that C. S., 3309, applies only to conveyances, contracts, and leases of land, which must be in writing, and may, therefore, *22
be registered. Rights and titles, which need not be evidenced by writing, resting upon approved principles of equity and enforceable by the court in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction, are not affected by the statute; a grantee in a registered deed may be held to have taken and to hold his title subject to such equities. Sills v. Ford,
Is one in possession of land under a deed valid as a conveyance against his grantor, but not valid as against judgment creditors of such grantor, because not registered at date of docketing of judgments, entitled to compensation out of the proceeds of the sale of said land prior to the rights of the judgment creditors for the amount by which the value of the land has been enhanced by permanent improvements made thereon by such grantee before notice of rights of the judgment creditors?
The equitable jurisdiction of the Superior Courts of this State has been frequently invoked by vendees of land who, while in possession under parol contracts to convey, void under the Statute of Frauds (C. S., 988), have enhanced the value thereof by permanent improvements and have thereafter been called upon to surrender possession by vendors who have repudiated their parol contracts. This Court, by a long line of decisions, has sustained the jurisdiction to afford relief by requiring compensation for such enhancement in value before aiding such vendors to recover possession of the land. Baker v. Carson,
In the instant case there has been no conduct on the part of defendants to induce plaintiff to make the improvements; as against defendants, plaintiff has no equity to aid him. While making the improvements, plaintiff had no notice of the possible claims of defendants, but he was fixed with notice by the statute that as long as he kept his deed from the record his title to the land was subject to the rights of subsequent grantees of the Engle Land Company for value, who recorded their deeds, and to the rights of creditors who reduced their debts to judgments and duly docketed the judgments.
We are unable to discover any equity upon which we can apply this just and beneficent principle to the relief of plaintiff in this action. As said in Wood v. Tinsley,
If improvements had been made on the land by the Engle Land Company prior to the docketing of the judgments, they would have simply increased the value of the property upon which the judgments became liens at date of docketing. Plaintiff, to whom all the title of the Engle Land Company passed, subject to the rights of purchasers for value, who recorded their deeds, or of judgment creditors, who docketed their judgments, stands in the shoes of his grantor, and has no greater rights and is subject to no less burdens, as against defendants; Wharton v. Moore,
We cannot refrain from expressing regret that, after a careful consideration of this case, we are unable to arrive at any other conclusion than that no cause of action is stated in the complaint, and that in sustaining the demurrer on that ground there was no error. The judgment must be
Affirmed.