In
Abernathy v. R. R.,
This excerpt was incorporated in the opinion in
Selma v. Nobles,
In her response Mrs. St. Cyr had denied the right of plaintiff to take the property in question and when the Clеrk appointed the commissioners to appraise the property on 7 October she toоk an exception to his order and gave notice of appeal, but did not pursue it. Here again a quotation from Abernathy v. R. R., supra, is pertinent: “No appeal lies until the final report of the Commissioners comеs in when upon exception filed the entire record is sent up to Superior Court where all the exсeptions may then be presented.”
The commissioners filed their report awarding defendants $11,000 for the taking of the property on 19 November, 1965. Notice of the award was given to the respondent on 3 December, but she filed no further exceptions at that time or prior to 28 December, 1965, when the Clerk enterеd his judgment in the matter after notifying the respondent’s counsel of his intention to do so.
G.S. 40-19 provides that: “Within 20 days aftеr filing the report * * * any persons interested in the said land may file exception to said report and upon the determination of the same by the court either party to the proceedings may apрeal to the court at term and thence after judgment to the Supreme Court.”
The Clerk’s judgment was signed some 40 days after the report had been made by the Commissioners to his office, and 25 days after the respondent had had formal notice thereof. In her failure to file exceptions or appeal during thеse times she waived her right to do so.
Having failed to perfect her appeal within the time, the respondent thereupon sought to present her alleged grievances by filing a petition for writ of recordari, but here аgain she fails to comply with the rules. To be entitled to recordari the petitioner must show she is not guilty of laches, there is merit in her case, and she must specify the facts from which the court may determine, instead of a general allegation of merit. Applicatiоn should be made promptly to the next term of court. McIntosh Practice & Procedure, Sec. 1882.
In view of (1) the long delay in filing the рetition, and (2) the fact that the jury awarded $11,000 when the respondent had said in her pleadings one time that $10,150 would be sufficient for the land, it is apparent that she has not been diligent and that she lacks merit.
The next term of Superior Court of Pitt County after the judgment was signed by the Clerk was on 24 January, 1966, but the record does not show that application was made at that term and it *118 was not presented until the term of court convening 21 Februаry, 1966.
In view of the foregoing, Judge Parker’s denial of the application was correct in Case No. 116, and it is therefore affirmed.
We find only one North Carolina case that deals with the question presented in Case No. 117. This is
Miller v. Asheville,
However, the question has been determined by a numbеr of other courts, and it is said in 27 Am. Jur. 2d 28: “According to the predominate view, where property is condemned and the question is raised as to whether the award should be distributed between a life tenant and remaindermеn, the award stands in the place of the realty and must be maintained as a whole, with the life tenant receiving the income and the corpus being reserved for ultimate distribution to the remaindermen.”
In
We accordingly hold that the life tenant, Mrs. Capehart, is entitled to the interest or income from the $11,000 award, and that at her death the respondent, Mrs. St. Cyr, would be entitled to the corpus of the award.
There was error in the ruling below.
In Case No. 116
Affirmed.
In Case No. 117
Reversed.
