78 N.C. 258 | N.C. | 1878
The plaintiff is entitled to recover. When real estate belonging to an infant or feme covert has been converted into money by a sale under decree of court for a division, the fund will continue to have the character of realty until a different character is impressed upon it by some act of the owner. (260)Jones v. Edwards,
It will be observed that the purchase by the husband was in July, *174 1848, before Rev. Code, ch. 56, was enacted, whereby all real estate belonging at the time of marriage to females, married since the third Monday of November, 1848, is prohibited from being sold or leased by the husband for the term of his own life, or any less term of years, except by and with the consent of the wife ascertained by her privy examination. The husband, therefore by virtue of his marital rights, was seized of an estate during coverture, and by the subsequent birth of issue became seized for his own life as tenant by the curtesy initiate. His deed of mortgage and the subsequent purchase by the plaintiff under the foreclosure proceedings vested the plaintiff with the estate for the life of the husband, and with a resulting trust at his death to the wife (or her heirs, if she does not survive him) to the extent of the purchase money she furnished. The plaintiff is therefore entitled to the possession of the land and its profits for the life of the husband, and in fee to the extent of the residue of the purchase money, not the proceeds of the sale of the wife's land.
It was further contended by the defendants that the mortgage to the plaintiff having been executed subsequent to the act of 11 May, (261) 1861 (known as the first Stay Law), was by section 7 of that act made illegal and void. This section provided: "That all mortgages and deeds in trust for the benefit of creditors hereafter executed, whether registered or not, and all judgments confessed during the continuance of this act, shall be utterly void and of no effect."
The constitutionality of this act came directly in question soon after its passage, in Barnes v. Barnes,
PER CURIAM. Affirmed.
Cited: Hall v. Short,
(262)