32 N.C. 63 | N.C. | 1849
We concur in the opinion of the judge below, for the reasons given by him. Irwin, the cropper, had a mere executory contract, a chose in action, which could not be assigned. S. v. Jones,
It was very ingeniously argued for the plaintiff that, yielding the question as to the corn, he was entitled to recover for the oats, upon the doctrine of estoppel; for although the bill of sale was executed before the oats were cut, yet as Irwin's share was afterwards allotted and stacked to itself, it thereby became vested in Irwin. This act of appropriation fedthe estoppel, and thus the right of property vested in the plaintiff.
When one sells property which does not belong to him, he and his privies are estopped from alleging that the vendee *58
(66) did not acquire the title; but the estoppel does not extend to third persons. If the vendor afterwards acquires the title, it feeds the estoppel and vests in the vendee a right of property, not only against the vendor and his privies, but against third persons. Thus the sale has a double operation: first, to conclude the parties and privies until the title is acquired; and then to pass the right of property. Fortescue v. Satterwhite,
Unless the party professes to have such an interest as could be passed by the conveyance, if he had it, there is no estoppel, for the plain reason that a matter of law can always be insisted on, as, that a chose in action is not assignable, and estoppels are restricted to matters of fact. InRight v. Bucknell, 2 Barn. and Ald., 278, it is said, "There is no estoppel when it is apparent, from the face of the deed or the averment of the party who relies upon it in interest, that, according to the fundamental doctrine of common assurances, the deed could not have sufficed to pass the estate which he claims to hold under its operation." Lord Coke says, in Co. Lit., 352, b, "One shall not be estopped where the truth appears by the same instrument, as that the grantor has nothing to grant, or only a possibility," and he might have added, "or only a chose in action."
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Barwick v. Wood,
(67)