17 N.C. 539 | N.C. | 1834
The answers of the defendants admitted the death of their father, John Thompson, the devise in his will, the marriage of his widow with the plaintiff Jesse, and the assumption of the executorship by him in right of his wife. They also admitted the sale of the land at the time mentioned, but denied that it was made in pursuance of learned legal advice, or in a regular and fair manner, and for a full price, and insisted that Williams did not purchase for his own use, but as the agent of and for the benefit of the plaintiff Jesse. They also denied that their settlements with the plaintiff Jesse were fair and bona fide, and made with a full knowledge of their rights, but averred that the plaintiff Jesse had taken advantage of their youth and ignorance of the provisions of their father's will, and had imposed such terms as he pleased upon them; that soon after ascertaining that they had not been fairly dealt by, they had applied to counsel, who had informed them of their rights, and they then commenced the action of ejectment mentioned in the bill. They denied the right of the plaintiff Sarah to her dower in the land, because she had not dissented from the will of her deceased husband. *430
(542) After the filing of the answer, the case was continued for several terms, when in 1831 the plaintiffs by leave of the court filed an amended and supplemental bill, in which they stated by way of amendment to their original bill that on 29 March, 1826, they had, as executor and executrix of John Thompson, executed a deed of conveyance to Ann Graham, wife of Stephen Graham, and sole heir to Jacob Williams, for the land purchased by said Williams, on 3 December, 1805, and that on 30 March, 1826, Stephen Graham and his wife, Ann, conveyed the same in fee to the plaintiff Jesse. The plaintiffs also stated that since the filing of the original bill they had instituted proceedings in the county court of Onslow to have the will of John Thompson established as a will to convey real estate, and after obtaining a verdict in their favor in the county court, the issues had been carried by appeal to the Superior Court, where, at March Term, 1831, the said will was established as a will to convey real estate, and the proceeding therein being certified to the county court, the will was duly recorded, and thereupon the plaintiff Sarah, who was then the sole surviving executrix to said will, qualified thereto, and letters testamentary issued to her. The plaintiffs alleged further that by the probate of the will as a will devising real estate, and by the qualification of said Sarah as executrix thereto, her acts under the same were validated, the probate having relation to the death of the testator, and thereby ratifying and confirming her prior acts.
Answers were put in to the amended and supplemental bill, but it is unnecessary to state their contents or to detail the testimony taken in the cause, as the judgment of the Court proceeded upon the facts disclosed in the pleadings above stated. As the plaintiff's case was at the filing of the original bill, or rather as it is therein stated, and in the subsequent additions as to facts existing at the commencement of the suit (which are properly amendments), there was doubtless a ground for relief in this (543) Court. That case was, that the will was inefficacious to pass the land, and that the parties had dealt with each other under a contrary belief; that the plaintiffs had made a deed to the heir of Williams, who had reconveyed to Sanderlin, and the latter had accounted with the defendants and the other children for their respective shares of the price of the land, as well as for the other parts of the estate, and had been in possession of the land and improved it, believing he had a good title, in which the defendants acquiesced. *431
The relief sought is, primarily, to be confirmed in the legal title by a conveyance from those to whom payment had been thus made, and to be quieted in the possession by an injunction against execution on the judgment at law; or if that cannot be, that dower may be assigned to the wife, the real estate being undisposed of; and that an account may be taken of the improvements and of the whole estate, and a decree that the defendants shall refund whatever it may be found they have been overpaid in respect of the land, to be raised out of the land, and for an injunction in the meantime.
The claim for dower, it is true, is not sustainable; and it is now settled, in Craven v. Craven,
But certainly there ought in such a case, supposing it true, to be a decree for a conveyance from the heirs, they having received the price of the land. It would amount to a sale by them, and ought to be specifically executed. But it would be open to all the equity upon which defendants may resist that relief; as that the price was inadequate, or that they were mistaken in their rights. But in this case even a wider field of objection would be open to them, as no express sale, that is, by a particular contract with that view, is alleged; but only one implied from the payments. As to that, the case is that all the parties had the idea that the sale already made was valid. This would impose on the plaintiffs the burden of proving, at least, that it was a fair sale for an adequate price; that Williams was a real purchaser, and himself substituted in his place by a subsequent and independent agreement, or (544) that the children were fully informed of the real facts, and with that knowledge received the money upon a settlement, in which the land was included. Upon these points there is evidence, which it is not necessary to investigate minutely, as the decree will not turn on it. Upon its examination it is indeed far from satisfactory. It does not appear that any account in detail was rendered or settled; but round sums were paid to the children, as they respectively came to age, and receipts taken, in which there is no notice of the lands specifically; and there is no other direct proof that it was included. The probability, also, that Williams purchased upon a previous agreement that the plaintiff should have the land is so strong as to amount almost to a certainty. There is no evidence that the plaintiff communicated that fact to the defendants, or that they knew it. Indeed, the bill affirms the contrary to be true, and that Williams did not buy for the plaintiff, but for himself. But as the decree will not declare these facts to be either way, as we do not proceed on them, and do not wish to conclude the parties upon them in any future litigation which may involve them, the examination of the evidence will not be further prosecuted. *432
It is plain that the material equity of this case arises upon the facts that the will did not confer a power to sell, and that the parties labored under a mistake upon that point — they thinking that it did, and treating the plaintiff as the owner. This equity would entitle the plaintiff to original relief, as an intrinsic equity of the case, independent of any proceedings at law. It rests upon the inability of a court of law to do him right, because his title is not a legal one. The judgment at law, and its mere legal injustice, does not create the equity of the case. Relief against the judgment is therefore merely collateral to the general relief to which the plaintiff is otherwise entitled, and is founded upon its being against conscience in the persons who have received the price of the land, as being effectually sold under the power, to take advantage of the want of it, and to insist on the legal title which (545) they have, because they happen also to be the heirs of the testator, and so to insist in a court of law, where the present plaintiffs could make no resistance.
It seems to the Court, for these reasons, that the new matter charged in the supplemental bill overrules the whole of this equity. It charges that pending the suit the will has been proved as a will to pass real estate, and that the power created therein is valid, and infers that the probate relates back, and that the former sale is confirmed thereby, and that Sanderlin has now the legal title. Supposing that sale a fair one to Williams, we see no reason to question the correctness of those positions, either as the rules of equity or law. But admitting that the sale to Williams was only colorable, and therefore that the persons to take benefit under the power might impeach it in this Court, there is nevertheless no jurisdiction here to entertain a bill of the present plaintiffs in respect of it, in which they allege that the power has been duly executed, and that under it one of them has the legal title. For the present, the case is considered upon its intrinsic equity, unaffected by the judgment at law, which, in the sequel, will not be forgotten.
It is true that notwithstanding the power, the descent was not broken, and the legal title was in the heirs. But a power is not an equity arising out of the estate of the heir, but is itself a legal authority over that estate, whereby, when executed, it may be divested and vested in another to hold as under the instrument which created the power. There is no equity, therefore, between the grantee of a power or the person in whose favor it has been executed (supposing it not to be defectively executed) and the heir. The grantee of the power has, to the extent of it, an absolute control over the estate at law, without the aid of this Court, and therefore cannot ask such aid. He may, as between himself and those for whose benefit it was created, in a case of doubtful construction, apply for directions; but against the heir by himself, and as such, there *433 is no relief to be given. There cannot be a bill by the grantee, (546) where the power is clear in its terms, merely for a decree to sell, and to bind the heir beforehand, except so far as it may be necessary to establish the will which contains the power; which is not one of the objects here. The will and powers being established, the heirs do not join in the sale. Nor after a sale and conveyance can there be a bill to confirm the sale and declare the conveyance valid. The plaintiff cannot state a case, involving those facts, which can have equity; for they turn every question and right as against the heir into a legal one. There are cases in which it is laid down that there is a jurisdiction in equity, upon the bill of the owner of a legal estate in possession, to decree a deed, made or kept on foot by fraud, and under which another claims the legal title, to be delivered up to be canceled. Lord Thurlow, indeed, thought that all that could be done was to perpetuate the testimony. But Lord Eldon ventured to say that he would give relief upon the principle of quia timet because the deed was apparently a legal title, by which the possessor might be harassed at law, and by the death of witnesses his title be defeated, though in truth the better one. But this can never be applied to a claim as heir, for there cannot be a fraud in the fact that he is heir.
As little ground for relief is there against the defendants, regarding them as the persons beneficially interested under the power as well as being the heirs. There is no case in which it has been decided or said that one having or claiming to have the legal title can come here to have it declared that another, who unjustly claims an equity arising out of that estate, has not such an equity. What comes nighest to it is a bill to foreclose. But that is essentially different. The mortgagee admits the equity of redemption to be a just right of the mortgagor, and submits that he may have the benefit of it: only he insists that he should not always have it, and prays that he should exercise it in a reasonable time, or thereafter lose it. But although, after twenty years, a mortgagee may rely upon the time as a bar to the mortgagor's own bill for redemption, there is no precedent of a bill by the mortgagor himself to have that time declared a bar. The bar to an equity is a defense to a bill to enforce it, but can never make a case for a decree merely (547) to restrain the future assertion of it.
The question upon the fairness of the transactions, upon which depends the validity of the plaintiff's title in equity, supposing it valid at law, can therefore only be investigated when it shall be impeached in equity by the persons interested under the power. The persons having the legal title cannot repel that right to impeach it by establishing its fairness now, while the other party does not allege its fairness in this Court, but is asserting, at law, its legal invalidity. *434
Nor can the questions upon the validity of the legal title be drawn into this Court upon any idea that anything will be deemed an execution of it here which is not so at law, or that the facts necessary to its validity can be better established here than at law. It may be doubted, indeed, whether a court of law would not be obliged to regard that as a good execution which this Court would not. For instance, if it be the fact that Williams purchased for the plaintiff, undoubtedly this Court would set the whole aside, unless the acts or acquiescence of the parties have since confirmed it. But it is by no means certain that at law they could look beyond the deeds; for the question is upon their effect upon the legal title of the heir, and it does not follow that he could take advantage of a fraud on the parties for whose benefit the power was conferred. LordCoke says, indeed, that if a power to sell be given to two executors, and one renounce, he cannot buy from his companion, but the deed is void. This is upon the apparent fraud, or danger of fraud, and the whole appears on the face of the title. Whether the inquiry could be carried further may be questioned. But if it could, it must depend, at law, upon precisely the same facts on which its validity, as a legal execution of the power, would be decided here as against the heir. There is, therefore, nothing in the case to call this Court into action, unless it be the judgment at law and the state of the evidence on which the (548) verdict was rendered; for the conveyances do apparently duly execute the power, which is a clear and explicit one to the executors, to sell upon the marriage of the widow; and the plaintiff has, upon the showing of his supplemental bill, the legal title.
What effect can the judgment, and the circumstances under which the verdict was obtained, have? For the plaintiff it is contended that at the trial he had not the legal title, though it turns out that he was then entitled to it, and that he has since got it; each of which circumstances gives him an equity, because the first made it unconscientious in the other party to sue at law, and, at all events, the last makes it so to take out execution on the judgment, since the title on which it was given is now divested.
It has already been remarked that the primary object of the first bill was to obtain the legal title, upon the supposition that the will gave no means of getting it; and that, if obtained, was the sole object of that bill, except for an injunction as consequential to the principal relief. All the other relief sought is only in the alternative of not obtaining that. The case now is, that the plaintiff has that title, and that the mistake consisted in supposing that the power was not well raised. If he was entitled to it from the plaintiffs at law, or if they could have prevented him, and did prevent him from getting it, and by those means *435 excluded him from his defense, then they did act against conscience, and the plaintiff ought to be relieved. Such the argument assumes to be the case. But the assumption is against the truth. The plaintiff had no right to call on the present defendants for the legal title. He had it potentially in himself, and culpably or ignorantly neglected to execute it. It has been shown that before being sued at law, he could not have framed a bill stating himself to have a valid power, or an executed title under such a power, on which any relief could be decreed against the heir, because the plaintiff could relieve himself. By the same means he could have effectually defended himself against the suit of the heir. It is his own folly that he did not. It is not against conscience (549) in the heir to enter and take the profits until a sale, as they are his right at law; and here the same persons were entitled both as heirs and as those among whom the proceeds of a sale were to be divided. It would only be iniquitous in them if they had received those proceeds and intercepted the legal title, which, in the actually existing case, they did not and could not do. The only thing which could affect the conscience of the plaintiffs at law would be that they were seeking to recover against one to whom they ought to convey the legal title, and who could not get it but from them. If he had it, there is no equity to prevent one legal claimant contesting the like claim of another, nor, after a trial at law, to enable the latter to reexamine the case. If he had it not, but had a right to claim it from a third person, the same principle applies. There can be no equity between persons between whom there is no privity.
It is not conceded that the present plaintiffs had not the legal title at the trial of the ejectment. It is supposed they had not, because the will had not then been proved as a will of lands, and prima facie it was not, as it had but one witness. This takes for granted that it could not have been proved on the ejectment. This proposition is not admitted, though it is not needful in this case to dispute or to determine it. If it might have been then proved, it was entirely the fault of the party not to offer the proof, or the mere error in law of the court to reject it; and in neither case can this Court help the party. But admitting that it was not evidence at law in that state, the subsequent probate establishes, against the present plaintiffs, that it was a good will, and the power over the real estate valid. These facts then existed, and there is no allegation in the bill that the parties were then ignorant either of the facts or the evidence of them. Can this Court, in such case, grant a new trial here, either upon the ground that the plaintiffs at law ought not to have got their verdict or that they ought not now to proceed on it, as their title is now gone? In the last point of view the verdict is regarded as being rightful (550) at the time. If the title is since divested, and *436 vested in the present plaintiffs, their remedy is in a new action at law upon their title. In the former we think the rule is settled that this Court does not interfere with a verdict in any action and again hear the matter upon its merits, or order a new action or issue to be tried at law unless the matter which the party now shows was not a defense at law, or unless he was prevented from showing it by the fraud of the opposite party on the trial or by mistake or accident amounting to surprise. Whenever a legal title will be relieved against in equity, upon one of its own peculiar principles, of course an injunction will be granted to stop proceedings at law upon such title. But when the relief is sought upon the ground merely that the party has lost his defense at law by any of the above means, it is granted solely because the court of law would, according to its forms of proceeding, be unable to redress the injury, and thus be made the instrument of doing injustice. In ordinary actions this is the consequence of their conclusiveness at law. Whether the principle extends to the action of ejectment may therefore be questioned, because that is not conclusive, and the applicant here can, by completing his evidence, do himself justice at law. Besides, it is probable that the only decree would be to stay execution until another ejectment could be tried; for a court of equity has no right to draw to itself the determination of pure questions of law, which can be tried in the appropriate tribunals. If that be so, the only operation of the injunction would be as to the costs of the first trial, for which alone a bill will not, I believe, lie in any case, and especially to charge heirs who have not been personally in fault. But however these points may be, there would be no ground for this injunction were the action one in which the judgment is conclusive; because it was in the power of the parties claiming under the power either to prove the will on the trial or, at all events, before it. They had the means of making it evidence, and they must abide the consequence of neglecting to do it.
(551) The bill and supplemental bill must, therefore, we think, be dismissed, with costs.
PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.
Cited: Norwood v. Lassiter,