Cleve v. Adams

Decision Date04 November 1942
Docket Number309.
Citation22 S.E.2d 567,222 N.C. 211
PartiesCLEVE et al. v. ADAMS et ux.
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court

See also, Adams v. Cleve, 218 N.C. 302, 10 S.E.2d 911.

Civil action under C.S. § 1743 to quiet title to real property.

At the September Term, 1926, Pitt Superior Court, in an action entitled J. Q. Adams et al. v. Sophronia Wall et al judgment was entered for plaintiff in the sum of $875 and costs.

On August 31, 1927, execution issued on said judgment and homestead in the locus in quo was allotted to plaintiff Sophronia Wall.

On December 13, 1938, Sophronia Wall and husband conveyed said land, by warranty deed, to D. W. and W. A. Cleve.

On December 15, 1938, D. W. and W. A. Cleve conveyed same by warranty deed to plaintiff H. C. Smith.

On November, 29, 1939, Adams and wife instituted a civil action against the present plaintiffs in which they sought to have said judgment declared a subsisting and specific lien on the land in controversy and for an order of foreclosure. The defendants therein--plaintiffs herein--answered, alleging that said judgment was void as to Sophronia Wall for that no summons, execution or other notice was ever legally served upon her in the original action; that she was, at the time under 21 years of age and that she then, in fact, had no general guardian authorized to appear in said suit and answer in her behalf.

When the cause came on to be heard in the Superior Court the judge, on motion of the then defendants contained in their answer and renewed at the hearing, treated the answer as a motion in the original cause to set aside and vacate the judgment. After hearing the evidence on the motion the court concluded that defendants had not offered sufficient evidence to warrant a disturbance of said judgment, dismissed the motion "as of nonsuit" and adjudged the judgment a valid and subsisting lien. Defendants gave notice of appeal but failed to prosecute same.

On January 30, 1928, Sophronia Wall and husband executed and delivered to D. W. and W. A. Cleve a mortgage on said premises to secure an indebtedness, evidenced by note, due by her to them. This mortgage was marked "paid and sudfied", December 15, 1938.

On November 17, 1941, plaintiffs herein--movants on the former hearing--instituted this action to remove cloud from their title cast by said judgment of record. They assigned the same grounds of attack as set forth in the motion. In addition they alleged that defendants have been guilty of such laches in prosecuting their right under the judgment as to bar any further action by them.

On the trial below plaintiffs offered, for attack, the judgment rolls in Adams v. Wall et al. and Adams v. Cleve et al. They also offered substantially the same evidence on the issue of the invalidity of the judgment as was offered on the hearing of the motion. They likewise offered the note and mortgage from Wall to Cleve.

The court, being of the opinion that the judgment entered on the motion to vacate the original judgment was res judicata, and that the execution of the note and mortgage to the Cleves was not material, entered judgment dismissing the action. Plaintiffs excepted and appealed.

Dink James, of Greenville, for appellants.

J. B. James and Julius Brown, both of Greenville, for appellees.

BARNHILL Justice.

The motion made in the original action to set aside the judgment against Sophronia Wall presented questions of fact and not issues of fact. It was for the judge to hear the evidence, find the facts and render judgment thereon. City of Monroe v. Niven, 221 N.C. 362, 20 S.E.2d 311, and cases cited. The judgment entered, though so labeled, was not a judgment of nonsuit. It was a judgment fixing and adjudicating the rights of the parties.

The parties to the motion to set aside the Wall judgment are the parties to this action. Plaintiffs herein, in making the motion in the cause and in instituting this action, had the same object in view--the invalidation of the Wall judgment. Although the form of the proceedings is not the same, the allegations made and the relief sought are identical. The validity of the judgment was adjudicated at the hearing on the motion. It cannot again be litigated in this action. Dillingham v. Gardner, 222 N.C. 79, 21 S.E.2d 898; Barcliff v. Norfolk Southern R. Co., 176 N.C. 39, 96 S.E. 644; North Carolina Mutual Association v. Edwards, 168 N.C. 378, 84 S.E. 359; Ludwick v. Penny, 158 N.C. 104, 73 S.E. 228; Ingle v. Cassady, 211 N.C. 287, 189 S.E. 776; Ferguson v. Spinning Co., 207 N.C. 496, 177 S.E. 640; Hampton v. Spinning Co., 198 N.C. 235, 151 S.E. 266; Coltrane v. Laughlin, 157 N.C. 282, 72 S.E. 961; Batson v. Laundry Co., 209 N.C. 223, 183 S.E. 413.

The additional documentary evidence--the note and mortgage--offered in the court below cannot affect this conclusion. Under our present system of pleading and practice a party is conclusively presumed, when sued in a second action on matters before litigated, to have set up in the former action all the defenses available to him. Ludwick v. Penny, supra, and cases cited. In any event, it has no bearing upon the regularity of the action in which the original judgment was rendered.

But the plaintiffs assert further that the mortgage conveyed the homestead and subjected the land to sale under execution on the judgment. Hence, they say, the judgment is barred by the 10-year statute of limitations, C.S. § 667, as amended by Pub. Laws 1935, c. 98, and that it should be so adjudged.

The allotment of homestead suspended the running of the statute of limitations against the judgment. C.S. § 667, as amended by Pub.Laws 1935, c. 98, C.S. § 728; N.C.Const. Art. X, sec. 2; Barnes v. Cherry, 190 N.C. 772, 130 S.E. 611; Formeyduval v. Rockwell, 117 N.C. 320, 23 S.E. 488. This included the period from August 31, 1927, to December 13, 1938. It follows that the judgment is not barred unless the mortgage executed by Sophronia Wall January 30, 1928, was a conveyance of the homestead within the meaning of C.S. § 729; N.C.Const., Art. X, sec. 8.

In this State mortgages are practically the same as at common law, with the exception of the mortgagor's equity of redemption and its incidents. The legal title passes to the mortgagee, subject to the equitable principle that the passage of the legal title...

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