The plaintiff has appealed from an adverse judgment on the pleadings. The motion for such judgment is in the nature of a demurrer, allowable against the plaintiff only when the complaint as modified by the reply fails to allege facts sufficient to state a cause of action or admits facts which constitute a complete legal bar thereto. When all facts necessary to establish the plea in bar are either alleged or admitted in the plaintiff’s pleadings, it becomes the duty of the court to pass on the plea as a matter of law.
McFarland v. Publishing Co.,
Conceding the plaintiff in her complaint states a cause of action for alimony under G.S. 50-16, nevertheless, by her reply, she ad mits she executed a separation agreement and property settlement in accordance with the statutory formality required by G.S. 52-12. At the time she executed the agreement and during the negotiations leading up to its preparation, she was represented by Messrs. Cars-well & Justice, Attorneys of Charlotte, who participated for weeks in the negotiations which culminated in the settlement. She admits she received the home and all furnishings in Charlotte; a Cadillac automobile and a station wagon; and in lieu of periodic payments of alimony she received, at her own insistence and request, a lump sum payment of $420,000.00 in cash. The record discloses she received (and still receives) $1,500.00 monthly from a trust fund set up for her by the defendant and his mother.
On the argument the plaintiff’s present counsel do not deny that the plaintiff’s attorneys in the settlement proceedings were highly successful members of the Bar, possessed a high degree of legal learning and business experience. The eminence, experience, and character of counsel who represent the plaintiff in procuring a property settlement bear directly on her subsequent attempt to set it aside as fraudulent. “The presence of able counsel for the wife at the conference resulting in a separation agreement, and at the time she executes and acknowledges a deed of separation, ‘negatives
The plaintiff’s pleadings are devoid of any factual allegations which raise an issue of fraud in procuring the separation agreement. The allegation, “(T)he plaintiff was advised (by whom is not disclosed) that the paper did not constitute a permanent settlement because the defendant would return, resume marriage relations, and the money received would be tantamount to a gift,” is an insufficient allegation on which to impeach the Clerk’s certificate required by G.S. 52-12. The above allegation reflects more on the plaintiff’s good faith than upon the defendant’s lack of it. Nor are we impressed with the allegation that the provisions made for the wife are so grossly inadequate as to amount to a total failure of consideration for the contract. According to the plaintiff’s allegation, the defendant’s salary at the time of their marriage was $30.00 per week. Thirty years later a trust fund of $1,500.00 per month, a furnished home, two automobiles, and $420,000.00 in cash constitute “a total failure of consideration.”
In the examination of the pleadings to determine whether a plea in bar is established thereby, we may treat the exhibit to the answer (the property settlement and separation agreement) as a part of the pleadings. The plaintiff’s reply admits its execution.
Sale v. Johnson, Com’r.,
Affirmed.
