after stating tbe case: We will consider tbe questions raised by this appeal in tbe order of their statement in tbe assignments of error, briefs and argument before us.
1. Tbe plaintiff attacks tbe last deed on tbe ground that on 5 July, 1912, tbe Secretary of State certified to tbe clerk of tbe Superior Court of Moore County that tbe Piedmont plantation Company on that date bad filed its consent in writing to tbe dissolution of tbe corporation, executed by tbe requisite number of stockholders, Raphael W. Pumpelly being tbe agent therein named and in charge thereof, and that tbe corporation could not thereafter convey its property. This contention, as we think, is based upon a misconception of tbe statute. Tbe corporation did not cease to exist at tbe date of tbe filing of tbe certificate of dissolution, as contended by appellant, but continued three years from that date as a body corporate, by'express provision of C. S., sec. 1193, wbicb *505 is, that all corporations whose charters expire, by their own limitation, or are annulled by forfeiture, or otherwise, shall continue to be bodies ■corporate for three years after the time when they would have been ■dissolved, “for the purpose of prosecuting and defending actions by or against them, and of enabling them gradually to settle and close their concerns, to dispose of their property, and to divide their assets,” etc. But the defendant relies upon the provisions of the next section (1194), which is above set out, in our statement of the case. It appears therefrom that the “directors, as trustees, may-sell and convey the corporate property upon such terms as they may prescribe,” but this does not exclude the idea that, in conveying the property, they may not do so in the name of the corporation in whom the legal title was originally vested. It may be conveyed in the name of the corporation by their order or direction, or perhaps they may convey it in their own names as directors and trustees. It appears in this record, and in the certificate ■of probate, as a fact judicially found by the clerk of the Superior Court, that the deed was made in the name of the corporation by order of the ■directors who, under the statute, were the trustees. So that the statute was fully complied with.
By reason of his appointment as agent in the dissolution proceedings ■of the corporation, it is probable that E. ~W. Pumpelly concluded he was thereby made the assignee of the mortgage, and out of abundance of caution joined the corporation in the sale of the land and in the execution of the deed to the plaintiff. If he was not such assignee, his joining in the sale, and in the execution of the deed, were harmless acts.
2. The defendant, through his counsel, further contends that on 25 September, 1909, O. S. Frye recovered a judgment for $26.89 against A. Legler, before a justice of the peace of Moore County, which was filed and docketed in the Superior Court on 21 July, 1911, more than a year after its rendition, and that execution issued on it from the Superior Court, and the land in controversy was levied on as the property of A. Legler, and sold and conveyed by the sheriff to G-. H. Humber, from whom, by mesne conveyances, the defendant claims title.
It is well to observe, in passing, that the judgment roll, introduced in ■evidence by defendant, shows that all of the executions issued to the sheriff on this judgment were returned by him without action, even down to 6 May, 1918, and the clerk was still issuing executions thereon so late as 1 April, 1921.
In order to sustain the claim of title by the defendant under the sheriff’s sale and deed, the appellant’s counsel frankly admitted that it is necessary for this Court to overrule several of its well-considered decisions heretofore rendered and to upset a doctrine which has existed
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and been recognized as a rule of property for well-nigb balf a century.
Williams v. Williams,
After all has been repeated, that has been, or can be said pro or con upon this important question, we concur in the view taken by a court of the highest authority in another ease, that whatever difference of opinion may have existed in this Court orginally in regard to these questions, or might now exist if they were open for reconsideration, it is sufficient to say that théy are concluded by the former adjudications. The argument upon both sides was exhausted in the earlier cases. It could subserve no useful purpose again to examine the subject.
Parker v. W. L. Cotton, etc., Co.,
It all comes to this that former precedents should not be reversed except upon strong and imperious necessity. The Federal Supreme Court, and some courts in other jurisdictions, have held that a decision is not an authority upon a question not considered by the court, though involved in a case decided.
Durouseau v. U. S.,
We admit that the rule which requires us to uphold former decisions upon the same subject is not an inexorable one, nor is it mandatory upon the Court.
Hertz v. Woodman,
Counsel for the defendant in this case very ably and zealously pressed upon us the necessity for overruling several decisions of this Court of comparatively recent date
(Williams v. Williams,
Plaintiff contended that the title never rested in Legler for even a moment, as he conveyed back to the company, by way of mortgage, at the same time he received the legal title from it, under
Moring v. Dickerson,
We conclude that in no view of the case'should the judgment of the' court below be disturbed by us.
No error.
