From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Hassell v. Mizell

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1849
41 N.C. 392 (N.C. 1849)

Opinion

(December Term, 1849.)

Where the dower has been assigned to a widow, by giving her one-third of the net profits of an estate, this is no impediment to a partition or sale for partition by the heirs.

APPEAL from the Court of Equity of WASHINGTON, at Fall Term, 1849, Bailey, J.

Heath for plaintiffs.

A. Moore for defendants.


One J. L. Harrison died seized of 3 acres of land, upon which was a grist and sawmill, cotton gin, storehouse, and outbuildings. One-third of the net profits was assigned to his widow for dower, subject to which the land was sold and purchased by one Aaron Harrison, who sold one undivided third part to the defendant Wilson Mizell, and another undivided part to the other defendant, Anson J. Mizell, and afterwards sold the remaining undivided third part to the plaintiffs, who pray for a partition and suggest that a sale will be necessary, as an actual partition cannot be made without injury to the interest of the parties concerned.

The defendants object to a partition, for reasons which it is unnecessary to state, as they were properly abandoned by their counsel in this Court. They also insist that there is no necessity for a sale.

The court below decreed a sale of the premises, from which decree the defendants appealed.


Tenants in common in possession are entitled to partition as a matter of right; and "where it appears to the satisfaction of the court that actual partition cannot be made without injury to some or all of the parties interested," this Court will decree a sale for the purpose of partition. The four plaintiffs are each entitled to one undivided fourth part of an undivided third part of 3 acres of land, upon which is situate a valuable grist and sawmill, a cotton gin, storehouse, etc. It is self-evident almost that an actual partition cannot be made without injury to them, and the proof clearly satisfies us that a sale is necessary, and that an actual partition is impracticable without injury to the defendants as well as the plaintiffs. Under these circumstances it is against conscience for the defendants to resist a sale, and the opposition made by them gives ground for the inference that their object is to compel the plaintiffs to sell out to them for less than could be obtained if the whole is sold. This is an advantage that equity will not allow a tenant in common to take of his cotenants.

It was urged in the argument that partition could only be made by tenants in common who were seized of the freehold, and not by such as have a remainder or reversion after an estate for life. This position is true, when the life estate extends to all the premises. Coke Lit., 167 a, as to the writ of partition by coparceners at common law, the benefit of which writ is extended to joint tenants and tenants in common by 31 and 32 Henry VIII., and the same principle is applicable to the proceedings for partition under our law, Rev. Stat., ch. 85, sec. 1, where an entry and survey by the commissioners is provided for. But the widow's right to dower would be no impediment to partition by sale, for she is authorized to join in the application and take one-third of the proceeds of the sale for life. Rev. Stat., ch. 85, sec. 11. Whether if dower (394) be assigned by metes and bounds it will be an impediment to partition of that kind need not now be decided, for in this case dower has been assigned by giving to the widow one-third of the net profits, thus leaving the possession and seizin of all the land in the plaintiffs and defendants as tenants in common.

The defendants must pay the costs of this Court.

PER CURIAM. Affirmed.

Cited: Miller, ex parte, 90 N.C. 629; Wood v. Sugg, 91 N.C. 99; Osborn v. Mull, ib., 207.


Summaries of

Hassell v. Mizell

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1849
41 N.C. 392 (N.C. 1849)
Case details for

Hassell v. Mizell

Case Details

Full title:THOMAS S. HASSELL ET AL. v. WILSON.W. MIZELL

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1849

Citations

41 N.C. 392 (N.C. 1849)

Citing Cases

Parks v. Siler

On motion of the defendants, His Honor dismissed the proceeding, on the ground that O. C. Siler was entitled…