74 N.C. 800 | N.C. | 1876
The Clerk filed the following report: "In obedience to the (801) order of the court directing the Clerk to inquire and report upon the respective rights of the plaintiffs inter se, in the funds derived from the sale of the lands in said cause, reports that the assignment of Lewis T. Bond, in the Vernoy note to the amount of $2,515.74, to the plaintiff, H. A. Benbury, administratrix of John A. Benbury deceased, was made before the assignment to the plaintiff Etheridge. He therefore finds, that the plaintiff H. A. Benbury's claim is entitled to be paid first out of said fund with interest thereon from February 16th, 1867, the date of the assignment."
The following exhibits accompany the report of the Clerk:
(Signed) LEWIS T. BOND, [SEAL.]
Witness my hand and seal this 18th Feb'y, 1867. (Signed) LEWIS T. BOND, [SEAL.]
The counsel for the plaintiff, Etheridge, excepted to the finding of the Clerk, claiming "that the plaintiffs are entitled equally pro rata to the fund in question. We think the view, taken by the Clerk of the question made by the exception, is correct. The legal effect of the assignment of Bond, was to vest in Benbury a specific sum in the note of Vernoy, to which Benbury was entitled in severalty, leaving the residue of the amount of the note in Bond, to be enjoyed by him or his assignee in severalty, after taking out the specific sum assigned to Benbury. So the idea of having a "tenancy in common," has nothing to rest on, and Etheridge, who took an assignment of another specific sum after the assignment to Benbury, stands in the shoes of Bond.
Exception overruled and report confirmed.
PER CURIAM. Judgment accordingly.
Cited: Bank v. Trust Co.,
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