28 S.E. 776 | N.C. | 1898
This is an action for possession of land and damages, etc. The case is stated as follows: "The plaintiffs introduced in evidence a regular chain of title from the State to the feme plaintiff, Sophie E. North, and showed the defendants to be in possession of that part of the land laid down on the map as forming a triangle and represented by the figures "1," "2" and "3," and offered evidence as to the value of the rents and profits, and here closed their case.
"The defendants thereupon offered to prove by the defendant, Kitty Bunn, that she went into possession of the land in controversy under a parol agreement with plaintiffs, and offered parol evidence to prove the contents of a letter from the feme plaintiff, Sophie North, to the feme defendant, Kitty Bunn, now lost, in which said letter the plaintiff, *478 Sophie North, offered, as defendants allege, to the feme defendant, to convey to her the land in dispute, if said defendant would buy from one Samuel King another strip of land and have the same conveyed to the feme plaintiff; and that said offer was accepted, and to comply therewith the said feme defendant paid the said King for the said strip of land and had the said King to make and deliver to the feme plaintiff a good and sufficient deed for the said strip of land described by the said plaintiff; that by reason of the said agreement the plaintiffs allowed the said defendant to improve and occupy the land in dispute for about five years; that said land was greatly improved and enhanced in value by the defendants, over and above any rents and profits due the plaintiffs. (To the introduction of this evidence the plaintiffs objected, and the objection was sustained by the Court, and the defendants (768) excepted.)
"The defendants also offered to prove by Linus North, who was offered as a witness by the plaintiffs, on the cross-examination of said witness, to prove that there was a parol contract by which plaintiffs agreed to convey the land in dispute to the feme defendant, if the defendants would purchase and convey to the feme plaintiff the land embraced in the figures "4," "5" and "6," represented on the plat, and that the defendants did purchase and caused to be conveyed to the said plaintiff the said land, and that the plaintiffs are now in possession of the same. (This evidence was objected to by the plaintiffs, and the objection sustained by the Court, and the defendants excepted.)
"No other or further evidence was offered by the defendants, and the Court thereupon submitted the following issues to the jury, to wit:
1. `Is the plaintiff, Sophie E. North, the owner of the land described in the complaint?
2. `Are the defendants in the unlawful possession of the land or any part thereof?
3. `What damage has the plaintiff sustained by reason of the unlawful possession of said land by the defendants?'
"The jury answered the first and second issues in the affirmative, and assessed the plaintiff's damage at $..., and the Court thereupon rendered judgment for the plaintiffs, as appears in the record, and the defendants excepted and appealed from the same to the Supreme Court."
The contract for the conveyance of the land in dispute, being in parol, and denied, cannot be enforced by reason of the statute of frauds. When the contract is denied the Court cannot hear proof of a void contract. Dunn v. Moore,
If the defendant's averments, in part or in whole, are sustained on the inquiry, then the full equitable rights of both parties must be administered, as to both tracts of land. Vann v. Newsom,
If it is true that defendant paid the whole purchase price for the land conveyed by King to the plaintiff in pursuance of the alleged agreement, then that land is her property, subject to any equity (770) found in the further investigation in favor of plaintiff, and she would be entitled to such conveyance as the Court shall direct. Code, section 426.
The plaintiff's judgment must be modified according to the principles herein indicated, and with that modification it is affirmed.
Modified and affirmed.
Cited: Vick v. Vick,