37 S.E. 219 | N.C. | 1900
This case is now before us on a petition to rehear, having been decided in
It is suggested that this is a case of conflicting equities, which should he resolved in favor of the defendant in possession; but we see no conflicting equities. Whatever may be the *148 equitable rights of the defendant, they do not conflict with those of the plaintiffs, because she has no equities against the plaintiffs. None of her money went to them, nor did it go to pay their debt, or exonerate their property. They never owed the debt, and their land had been exonerated by operation of law before it was bought by the defendant, or even sold by the mortgagee. If she has any equities, by subrogation, or otherwise — and that question is not before us — it seems to us that they must be against either the father, whose debt she paid, or those who received her money. What legal rights she may have against her vendor we have no means of knowing. This may seem a hard rule, and we frankly admit that we have carried it as far as we care to go; but so far we must go in deference to the settled decisions of this Court, and in justice to the trusting wife and helpless children. Perceiving no error in our former judgment, the petition to rehear is dismissed.
We do not think that a motion for a new trial for newly-discovered evidence is properly before us on a petition to rehear, even if due diligence had been shown.
Petition dismissed.
Cited: Smith v. Parker,
(219)