90 S.E. 140 | N.C. | 1916
On the facts as found by the court there was judgment for defendants, and plaintiff excepted and appealed. The land was owned by Thomas Holton, who died on or before 1878, leaving a last will and testament in which he devised the land to his wife for life, remainder to A. D. Holton, his nephew. The widow died in 1914. The plaintiff claimed the land under a deed from A. D. Holton, devisee, executed in 1913. Defendants claimed as heirs at law of L. D. Henries, who held same under a deed from Josephus Linton and wife, Josephine, dated in June, 1879, and offered evidence tending to show that defendants and those under whom they claimed had since been in possession, asserting ownership under said deed.
It appeared that Josephus Linton held under a deed from Charles H. Fowler, bearing date in February, 1879. Fowler had bought at a judicial sale, in which the land was sold under a decree of Superior Court of Pamlico County, before clerk and on petition duly filed by Josephus Linton, executor of Thomas Holton, and Emeline and A. D. Holton, his heirs at law, to make assets to pay the debt of said Thomas Holton, and in which the special proceedings docket showed entries as follows:
"Summons issued 4 April, 1878. Summons served 15 April, 1878. Order of sale 20 April, 1878. Report of sale 18 July, 1878. Final decree approved 19 November, 1878."
And these proceedings approved by the judge of the Superior Court in term.
The summons in the cause showed return as follows: "Received 12 April, 1878. Served 15 April, 1878." *268
There were also facts in evidence tending to show that an answer for the said A. D. Holton, then 17 or 18 years of age, was duly filed (218) by one Hooker, as guardian ad litem for said A. D. Holton, or by W. D. Hooker, his general guardian; that same had disappeared from the court proceedings and could not be found after due and diligent search. It was further shown that W. R. Hooker had qualified as general guardian of A. D. Hooker, and, on a settlement, had paid him a small amount of money, a residue from proceeds of land sale.
On part of plaintiff there was evidence tending to show that defendant's actual occupation of the land had not been more than five or six years, and, further, that the summons had not been personally served on A. D. Holton, the minor.
Upon these, the facts chiefly relevant, his Honor was clearly right in his judgment that plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
The facts in evidence strongly tend to show that the proceedings were in all respects regular and that defendant's title has never been open to question; but were it otherwise, and by reason of the fact that summons was not personally served on the minor, our authorities are very uniformly to the effect that the interest of the minor having been presented and an answer having been filed by his general guardian or guardian ad litem, the failure to serve on the minor personally was only an irregularity, to be corrected, if at all, by motion in the cause. Harris v. Bennett,
Speaking to the question, in Becton v. Dunn,
There is no error, and the judgment of his Honor is
Affirmed. *269
Cited: Gough v. Bell,
(219)