58 S.E. 1005 | N.C. | 1907
It appears from facts found by his Honor at the hearing below that, in September, 1894, the original summons was issued in the name of Charles Williams, guardian of Julia Bizzell (now Parrott), against Duncan McFadyen, to collect the purchase money for a tract of land and enforce a vendor's lien therefor against said McFadyen, who held the same under a bond for title, and was in possession, claiming the interest in land existent by reason of said bond. At a subsequent term, said Charles Williams, individually, and his wife, Sarah J. Williams, mother of Julia F. Bizzell, were allowed to join and file a supplemental complaint as claimants of a part of said purchase money. At October Term, 1905, judgment was had in favor of plaintiffs for the amount of the purchase money and "condemning the land to be sold" for the payment of the debt, interest, and cost, allowing plaintiffs to bid at the sale, and appointing John D. Kerr, attorney of plaintiffs, as "commissioner to make the sale pursuant to the order of the court, make report of his proceedings, and retaining the cause on the docket for further orders and decrees." No sale was ever had under this decree, nor was any *114 action taken by the commissioner, and the cause was continued from term to term, until February Term, 1905, when the original defendant, Duncan McFadyen, having died, it was ordered that his administrator and heirs at law be made parties defendant, which was done by service of summons issued and returnable at a subsequent term. Later, at May Term, 1906, it was ordered that Julia F. Parrott, formerly Julia Bizzell, and her husband, George F. Parrott, be made parties plaintiff, and these parties thereupon filed another complaint, setting out their interest in the purchase money and giving a history of the cause to date, styling their affidavit a complaint. Defendants filed an affidavit, styled (158) an answer, setting forth their statement of the matter, and pleading various statutes of limitations, more especially setting up the ten-year statute, in bar of plaintiff's right to relief. The cause then came on for hearing before his Honor, Judge B. F. Long, as stated, who found the facts and gave judgment for plaintiffs, directing sale by a substituted commissioner, as shown by his decree.
Defendants excepted and appealed.
After stating the case: We are unable to perceive in what way or by what statute of limitations the plaintiffs are barred of their right to enforce the collection of their debt by a sale of the property. The defendants more particularly insist that the demand is barred by the ten-year statute of limitations, applicable to judgments (Rev., 391), and that this position finds support in a direct adjudication of this Court. McCaskill v.McKinnon,
We have it, then, that, as to the questions involved in this motion, the cause is still pending. Plaintiffs are here representing the same interests and asserting the same right claimed and established by the unexecuted and interlocutory decree; and defendants, as successors and heirs at law of Duncan McFadyen, deceased, are parties of record, (160) bound by the terms of the decree, subject to the orders of the court made in the cause, and when nothing has occurred to put them in a hostile attitude, so as to cause the statute to operate for their protection. The judge below was correct, therefore, in ruling that plaintiff's right to proceed was not barred by the statute of limitations.
Inasmuch as some of the affidavits offered and used on the hearing are styled complaints, and some of the notices issued are called summons, we deem it well to note that the relief sought by plaintiff on this hearing, the cause not having terminated by final judgment, is only to be had by motion in the cause; and that, according to our present decisions, an independent action instituted and prosecuted as such will not longer be treated as a motion in a pending cause. Long v. Jarratt,
There is no error, and the judgment is
Affirmed.
Cited: Bradburn v. Roberts,
(161)