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Tomlinson v. Blackburn

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1843
37 N.C. 509 (N.C. 1843)

Opinion

(June Term, 1843.)

1. A man who buys property at an execution sale buys it only subject to the equitable claims then existing on it.

2. Where A had contracted by covenant under seal to buy a tract of land in fee from B, in which B had only a life estate at the utmost, his wife being entitled to the fee, and under an execution C bought all B's interest before he and his wife conveyed to A: Held, that A, although he had given notice to C of his contract with B, could not recover the land from C without paying him at least the value of B's life estate, although A after such sale by execution had paid B all he had contracted to pay.

THIS was an appeal from an interlocutory order of the Court of Equity of IREDELL, at Fall Term, 1842, his Honor, Nash, J., presiding, refusing the motion to dissolve the injunction, which theretofore had been obtained in the case, and directing the injunction to stand over until the final hearing of the cause.

The facts disclosed by the bill and answers are stated in the opinion delivered in this Court.

Caldwell for plaintiff.

J. H. Bryan and Boyden for defendants.


The substance of the plaintiff's bill is that on 4 January, 1841, he contracted with one Thomas J. Lazenby for the purchase of a tract of land, whereof the said Lazenby's wife, by whom the said Thomas had issue, was seized in fee; that thereupon Lazenby executed to him a bond in the (510) penal sum of $1,050, with condition to make a good and lawful title for the land as early as the same could be done, and he executed unto the said Lazenby his bond for the sum of $375, payable in good negotiable notes, and also another bond for $150, payable in a four-horse wagon, amounting together to $525, the stipulated price of the land. The plaintiff further states that on 17 February following a deed was executed in the name of Lazenby and wife, but which, because of some error or informality in the commission for taking her examination and in the return of the commission, operated in law as the deed of Lazenby only, whereby the said Lazenby and wife were declared to bargain and sell the said land to the plaintiff and his heirs forever, and thereupon the plaintiff entered into the possession thereof. The bill then states that at the February Term, 1841, of Iredell County Court, which was before the execution of the said conveyance, a judgment was obtained against said Lazenby; that an execution tested of that term issued to the sheriff and was by him levied upon said land; that a sale was made by the sheriff, notwithstanding the plaintiff gave notice of his equitable interest in the said land; that the defendants bought the land at said sale, and one of them (Blackburn) hath taken a conveyance from the sheriff and has since brought an action of ejectment to turn the plaintiff out of possession. The bill avers that the plaintiff, believing himself to be unquestionably the owner in equity of the land aforesaid, and supposing himself bound by the contract with Lazenby to pay the amount of his bonds to Lazenby, hath, since the sale as aforesaid by the sheriff, paid up the whole thereof, except about the sum of $25, and the deed previously executed has been so acknowledged by Lazenby's wife as to render the same effectual as her conveyance. In addition to this, which we deem the substance of the bill, there are statements of conversations between the plaintiff and the defendants jointly or severally, and conferences between the defendants, from which may be inferred a charge that the defendants had combined to run up the land at the sheriff's sale to a high price and to get the plaintiff to take it at that price as bid (511) off for him. The answer of the defendant Tomlinson disclaims his having had any connection with the other defendant in the purchase at the sheriff's sale or having any interest whatever in the land. That of the defendant Blackburn declares that he did bid off, as the agent of the plaintiff; that he has offered to the plaintiff the benefit of the said bid, which the plaintiff hath refused; that he hath accordingly taken a conveyance from the sheriff and brought his ejectment because of his refusal, and he yet proposes to surrender his legal title to the plaintiff on being repaid the price he gave for the land and his costs. Both the defendants give their explanations of the conversations and conferences stated in the bill, repelling the charges of combination. Upon the coming in of these answers it was moved by the defendants to dissolve the injunction which had been granted upon the filing of the bill against the proceeding in the action of ejectment instituted by Blackburn. This motion was refused, and from the interlocutory order keeping up the injunction the defendants were permitted to appeal to this Court.

It seems to us that there is no equity in the cause made by the bill to warrant the injunction. At the teste of the execution under which Blackburn bought, Lazenby, the debtor, was seized of a legal estate as tenant by the curtesy initiate, for the term of his life, and this estate was liable to sale under that execution. If Blackburn purchased for himself, he acquired under the sheriff's conveyance that legal estate — subject, of course, to all the equities in relation thereto which bound Lazenby. Dudley v. Cole, 21 N.C. 429; Freeman v. Hill, ib., 389. The plaintiff, who had then paid no part of the purchase money under his contract, had no right to demand a conveyance of this legal estate from Blackburn without paying to Blackburn either what it cost him or a ratable part of the price which the plaintiff had stipulated to give for the fee-simple interest. Linch v. Gibson, 4 N.C. 676; Forth v. Duke of Norfolk, 4 Mad., 507 (note). Blackburn, not Lazenby, was then the owner of the life (512) estate, and Blackburn, not Lazenby, was equitably entitled to the price thereof, if the plaintiff chose to insist on the purchase. The plaintiff had his remedy against Lazenby on the bond to make a good title, or he might have rescinded the contract altogether and had his covenants delivered up. His voluntary act, after it had been ascertained that Lazenby could not convey the freehold because it had been assigned to Blackburn, in paying to Lazenby the entire price of the tract may have been done, as he alleges, under the supposition that Lazenby had a right to receive it. But this was a mistake, and he had no equity to throw the loss thereby sustained upon Blackburn, who in no manner caused the mistake. If, on the other hand, he chooses to regard Blackburn as having bought Lazenby's legal estate for him, nothing is as yet satisfactorily disclosed which entitles him to an assignment of that estate upon more favorable terms than those which Blackburn agrees to accept. It is the opinion of this Court that the injunction ought to have been dissolved, and this opinion must be certified to the Court of Equity for the county of Iredell. The plaintiff must pay the costs of the appeal.

PER CURIAM. Ordered accordingly.

Overruled: Tally v. Reed, 74 N.C. 464, 469.

(513)


Summaries of

Tomlinson v. Blackburn

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1843
37 N.C. 509 (N.C. 1843)
Case details for

Tomlinson v. Blackburn

Case Details

Full title:ALFRED W. TOMLINSON v. ABSALOM B. BLACKBURN ET AL

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Jun 1, 1843

Citations

37 N.C. 509 (N.C. 1843)

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