41 N.C. 188 | N.C. | 1849
The case made by the bill and answers is as follows: In 1836 the defendants James Miller and his wife, Frances, James Foster and his wife, Martha, and Susan Booker, were tenants in common of a tract of land lying in the county of Rutherford, and, in the same year, procured a decree of the court of equity directing its sale. Under this decree the land was sold by the clerk and master, and the defendant John H. Alley became the purchaser at the price of $1,107, and to secure the payment gave his bond with the plaintiff Ransom Egerton and James Erwin, the intestate of John W. Erwin, the other plaintiff, his sureties. Alley made several payments, but failing to discharge the bond, an action was brought upon it against him and his sureties, and judgment having been obtained, the whole amount remaining due was collected out of the sureties by an execution, Alley being entirely destitute of property. This judgment was obtained at January Term, 1847, of Rutherford Superior Court. In July, 1842, John H. Alley, being largely (189) indebted, conveyed or attempted to convey the land so *143
purchased by him to John W. Hampton and Samuel S. Hampton, in trust to secure the debts mentioned in the deed, and on 14 September, 1846, they conveyed the land, by deed, to the defendant John S. Jackson. The legal title to the land is still in the tenants in common, the clerk and master never having made any conveyance to Alley or to any other person. The plaintiffs pray that the land may be resold and the money paid by them be repaid, with interest from the time they paid it.
The equity of the plaintiffs is a very plain one, and they are entitled to the relief they seek. The question presented by the case is indeed not an open one. Green v. Crockett,
PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.
Cited: Freeman v. Mebane,