33 N.C. 469 | N.C. | 1850
This is a petition filed in August, 1847, by the administrator de bonisnon of Elisha F. Hare, to sell a tract of land under the act of 1846, ch. 1, which makes real estate personal in certain cases. The intestate died in 1846, and administration was granted in that year to a person who died in 1847, and in August, 1847, the letters were granted to the petitioner. The intestate had no child, but left his father and brothers and sisters, who were his heirs at law and are defendants. The petition states that the intestate died indebted to several persons in particular sums mentioned, and that he left no personal assets, but died seized in fee of the tract of land described in the petition, and that it was necessary to sell the same for the *333 payment of those debts, and prays that such sale be made. The heirs at law made no resistance. But one John Felton claimed the premises under an alleged sale and conveyance (470) made to him by one Norfleet, and applied to the County Court to have an issue made up to try the title, which was allowed. On his motion the petition was then dismissed by the County Court, but without any cause assigned in the record, and an appeal was taken by the petitioner. In the Superior Court the counsel of Felton objected that the petition could not be sustained because administration on the intestate's estate had been first granted in 1846, and therefore the case was not within the act. But the court held that it was within the spirit and equity of the act, and denied the motion; and a jury was then impaneled on the issue. On the trial evidence was given that in 1824 Thomas Hare conveyed the premises in fee to the intestate, then an infant of tender years, and delivered the deed and the possession of the premises to Jesse L. Hare, the father of the intestate, to be held for his said son; and that the said Jesse L. and the intestate lived together on the premises until the death of the latter in 1846. Felton then gave in evidence a deed for the premises, made to him by Norfleet in 1833, reciting that Norfleet had purchased the land at sheriff's sale for taxes, as the property of the intestate. And he gave further evidence that in the year 1833, he (Felton) put the wife of the said Jesse L. in possession of the premises, to hold the same during her life, and that thereafter the said Jesse L., his wife, the intestate, and their other children, continued to live there as one family, as they had done before, until the death of the intestate, and up to the present time. And evidence was further given on the part of said Felton that the intestate, about a year before his death, said the land belonged to said Felton.
The counsel for Felton prayed the court to instruct the jury thereon that the possession of the premises by his tenant, the wife of Jesse L. Hare, from 1833 to the death of the (471) intestate, under the color of title constituted by the deed from Norfleet, vested the title in him. But the court refused to give that instruction, and directed the jury that if Jesse L. Hare took possession and held for his said son, his possession did not become opposed to his son by reason that Felton professed, as stated, to put the wife of the tenant into possession. The jury found that Felton was not entitled to the premises, and the intestate, Elisha L. Hare, was seized of the same in fee at the time of his death. After judgment against Felton for costs, he appealed. *334 Besides the points made at the trial, there are others arising on the facts stated in the record which would be worthy of consideration, if needful to the decision of the pending appeal. One, for instance, is whether, notwithstanding the broad terms of section 13 of the act of 1846, "when the land shall be claimed by another under any pretense whatsoever," a stranger who sets up a title adverse to the deceased is within the act, so as to enable the administrator to make him a party to the petition in order to determine the property; or whether those terms are not rather to be construed in reference to sections 4, 11 and 12 and thus confined to persons "interested in the said estate" of the deceased, either as heir, devisee, mortgagee, fraudulent donee, or other person claiming under the deceased. Then, supposing that an adverse claim may be litigated in this form of proceeding, another question is, whether it must not be at the instance of the administrator, and the claim be set forth in the petition, or whether, as here, the adverse claimant may, of himself, intervene and demand an issue (472) upon his title. These points, however, may be passed over, since, supposing them for the appellant, the Court hold the opinion to be correct, that he has not the title to the premises, and, therefore, that he has no right to a reversal of any judgment that might have been rendered on the petition. He did not set up the deed to himself, as vesting the title in him, but only as color of title. Consequently it remained for him to show seven years' possession under it, adverse to the real owner; and in that he failed entirely. For it cannot be in the least doubted that when a husband is in possession, he is not deprived of it by any arrangement between his wife and a third person, pretending to own the land and to put her in possession. So when the husband is in under one person, the character of his possession cannot be changed by such an arrangement and pretense, the husband not being, in fact, disturbed, but continuing to enjoy as before. If the wife could be regarded at all as Felton's tenant, yet she had no distinct possession of her own, as the husband and son were all the time on the land, and the possession would be adjudged to be with the title. Judgment was therefore properly rendered against the appellant for the costs accrued on the issue tendered by him.
As the appellant is thus put out of the case, it is not material between those parties whether the court was right or wrong in holding this to be a proper case for the sale under the act of *335 1846, notwithstanding administration was first granted on the intestate's estate in 1846; for, if wrong, then, in the first place, it was the appellant's folly to intervene in a matter in which no order could be made to his prejudice, and, in the next, having no title to the property, he has no interest in the question. But, as the appeal was from an interlocutory judgment on a collateral question, there can be no final judgment here, but the cause must be remanded for further proceedings between the other parties; and as the question is raised in the record, it seems proper the Court should give an opinion on it, in (473) aid of the parties upon these or other proceedings to subject the land for the intestate's debts. Upon this question the opinion of the Court differs from that of his Honor. Both in section 4 and in section 18 it is expressly provided that the mode of proceeding prescribed in the act shall only be in use when the will may have been proven or letters of administration granted on or after February 1, 1847. When there is a will there can be no mistake as to the construction; for, without any regard to the date of the will or the period of the testator's death, or the qualification of the executor or administrator cumtestamento annexo, the jurisdiction is determined by the period of the probate of the will, and by that alone, according to the tenor of the act. It seems plain that the provision intended to designate explicitly some certain event and period for the important changes introduced, not only as to the mode of proceeding to subject real estate, but as to the application thereof or the proceeds to the debts, so that the creditors and representatives of deceased debtors might know exactly their rights and duties at the different periods, before and after that day. An administrator with the will annexed is thus plainly excluded, when the will was proved before February, 1847, though his letters were granted afterwards. As the reason for that provision arises out of the rights of the creditors to preferences, it follows, when the original administration was before February, 1847, that the administrator de bonis non, subsequently appointed, stands on the same ground with the administrator with the will annexed, above supposed. But that is put beyond all question by the additional enactment in the close of section 18 that "the present mode of proceeding against real estate shall be in use in all cases when the will may have been proven or letters of administration granted prior to that day," (474) that is, prior to 1 February, 1847. Upon the grant of the first administration, the rights of the creditors, as between themselves, were determined by the law then in force, as were also the means of obtaining satisfaction by the various legal and *336 equitable remedies, according to the nature of the securities and of the assets, as legal or equitable; and the provisions under consideration were intended as a plain declaration that neither those rights nor remedies were to be interfered with in any existing case or any one that might arise thereafter, provided there had been, or should be, a probate of the deceased debtor's will, if he left one, or an administrator on his estate, if intestate, before the first of February following, by which time it might be expected the new law would be generally known. Whatever obscurity may rest on other parts of the act or difficulties arise out of its provisions, those upon this point seem sufficiently plain, and show that the present case is not embraced in the act, and that it was erroneous to entertain the petition.
The decision of the Court, however, is that there is no error in the judgment against John Felton, from which he appealed. That will be certified to the Superior Court, with directions to proceed as between the other parties according to right and justice.
PER CURIAM. Ordered to be certified accordingly.
(475)