149 S.E. 679 | N.C. | 1929
The facts are set forth in the judgment. On 23 January, 1922, R. E. Belcher and Lucy Belcher, his wife, executed to W. R. *477 Willis, as trustee, a deed of trust conveying real property described as follows: "The following lands, lying between Barrett and George streets on a certain map made by Harding and Rivers, known as subdivision of the Belcher property at Farmville, North Carolina, dated April, 1928, and being lots Nos. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9." In 1925 the trust was foreclosed and the property was sold to the petitioner, the Pitt County Insurance and Realty Company, at the price of twelve hundred dollars. The commissioners who had made the sale under a decree in equity, submitted their report recommending that the sale be confirmed. Thereafter the sale was confirmed, and the commissioners were authorized and directed to convey to the petitioner the specific property described in the deed of trust. They complied with this order on 20 July, 1925, the land conveyed being the lots described in the deed of trust and in the decree of foreclosure. The appellants refused to give the petitioner possession.
Upon consideration of the foregoing facts it was adjudged that the petitioner is the owner and entitled to the possession of lots 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9, as they appear on the map referred to in the deed of trust, and that a writ of assistance be issued directing the sheriff to evict the appellants and to put the petitioner in possession of the property.
A writ of assistance is a form of process issued by a court of equity to transfer the possession of lands, the title or right of possession to which it has previously adjudicated, as a means of enforcing its decree. Bank v.Leverette,
In their answer to the petition the appellants allege that the map referred to was not in existence when the deed of trust was executed, and that the petitioner has caused a subdivision of the property so as to convey the land not described in the deed of trust; and in their brief they take the position, as we understand, that as their allegations are not denied they must be taken to be true. The allegations, however, are matters of defense which are deemed to be denied; and in the record there is no finding in reference to them and no exception to the court's refusal to find any facts relating to them. The only land acquired by the purchaser is that which is described in the deed of trust, in the judgment of the court, and in the deed of the commissioners. Judgment
Affirmed. *478