Frederick v. . Williams

9 S.E. 298 | N.C. | 1889

The parties waiving a trial by jury, agreed to the following facts, with the understanding that the court should render judgment thereon according to his opinion of the law arising therefrom:

1. Norris F. Frederick made mortgage deed for the lands in dispute on 18 April, 1873, for $596.

2. After maturity of said mortgage the mortgagee advertised and sold said lands and himself became the purchaser.

3. Under and by virtue of said sale and purchase the mortgagee, the defendant in this action, entered into the adverse possession of said lands on 1 January, 1874, and has held and used them as his own ever since, and has put valuable improvements thereon.

4. At various times since such sale the defendant has received (190) as rents for said premises large sums of money, some of which has been paid by his tenant within three years prior to the commencement of this action.

5. At the time of such sale the mortgagor was residing in a remote part of the State.

6. Norris Frederick, the mortgagor, died about 1 January, 1883.

7. There has been no administrator or executor of his estate. *158

8. The plaintiffs in this action are infants of tender years, heirs at law of the mortgagor Norris Frederick, and are without any general or testamentary guardian, and have never had any guardian.

9. This action was commenced on 6 June, 1887.

Upon a consideration of the foregoing facts, the court, upon being of the opinion that the defendant was entitled to judgment on his plea of the statute of limitations, adjudged that the plaintiffs go without day, and they appealed. The defendant, after the maturity of the mortgage debt, entered into "the adverse possession" of the property on 1 January, 1874. The mortgagor died about 1 January, 1883. The statute of limitations (The Code, sec. 152, par. 4) had, therefore, run against him for a period of nine years. This action was brought on 6 June, 1887, and is barred, unless the plaintiffs can bring themselves within some of the disabilities prescribed by The Code. It is (191) well settled that, when the statute of limitations begins to run, nothing stops it. "So, when it begins to run against the ancestor, it is not suspended by any statutory disability in the heirs at the time of descent cast." Wood on Limitations, 11; Pearce v. House, Term Rep., 722. Four years after the death of the mortgagor, and about three after the equity of redemption had been barred (Bruner v. Threadgill, 88 N.C. 361), the heirs of the mortgagor, who are infants, bring this suit to redeem.

We see nothing in section 148 of The Code, cited by counsel, which changes the law as it formerly existed, nor do we see how section 168 of The Code can help the plaintiffs. Conceding that this section relates to actions other than personal, the plaintiffs have not brought themselves within its terms by suing within a year after the death of their ancestor, and there is no saving, as to infancy, in the section referred to.

There is no error in the ruling of his Honor, and the judgment will be affirmed.

No error. Affirmed.

Cited: Chancey v. Powell, ante, 160; Dobbins v. Dobbins, 141 N.C. 219;White v. Scott, 178 N.C. 638; Clendenin v. Clendenin, 181 N.C. 471. *159

midpage