Lamm v. Crumpler, 746
Decision Date | 07 June 1951 |
Docket Number | No. 746,746 |
Citation | 233 N.C. 717,65 S.E.2d 336 |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Parties | LAMM, v. CRUMPLER et al. |
Brooks, McLendon, Brim & Holderness, Greensboro, for plaintiff appellee.
Allen & Allen, and Young, Young & Gordon, Burlington, for defendants appellants.
The point raised by the demurrer ore tenus entered here for the first time, and debated orally, being well founded, takes precedence over, and renders it unnecessary to consider those questions of law arising upon the demurrer filed and heard in the trial court, and debated in the written briefs of the parties on this appeal. Hence we have abbreviated statement of facts pertaining to those questions of law.
A defendant in a civil action in this State may demur ore tenus at any time in either the trial court, or in the Supreme Court, upon the ground that the complaint does not state a cause of action. Indeed the Court may raise the question ex meromotu. Garrison v. Williams, 150 N.C. 674, 64 S.E. 783; Snipes v. Monds, 190 N.C. 190, 129 S.E. 413; Watson v. Lee County, 224 N.C. 508, 31 S.E.2d 535.
Hence the demurrer ore tenus interposed in this Court, as hereinabove set forth, is timely.
, so declared this Court in opinion by Henderson, C. J., in Smith v. Greenlee, 13 N.C. 126. This principle has been applied through subsequent years. See Morehead v. Hunt, 16 N.C. 35; Bailey v. Morgan, 44 N.C. 352; McDowell v. Simms, 45 N.C. 130; Ingram v. Ingram, 49 N.C. 188; Whitaker v. Bond, 63 N.C. 290; Davis v. Keen, 142 N.C. 496, 55 S.E. 359; Henderson-Snyder Co. v. Polk, 149 N.C. 104, 62 S.E. 904; Owens v. Wright, 161 N.C. 127, 76 S.E. 735.
In Whitaker v. Bond, supra, the relief sought by the complainant is specific performance of a contract relating to land. The 4th headnote epitomizes the opinion of the Court: 'Where a bidder at auction offered one, who also proposed to bid, that if he would desist she would divide the land with him: Held, to be a fraud upon the vendor and so to violate the contract of purchase afterwards made by her as the only bidder'.
Moreover, it is an established principle, universally applied in this jurisdiction to various factual situations, that an executory contract, the consideration of which is against good morals, or against public policy, or the laws of the State, or in fraud of the State, or of any third person, cannot be enforced in a court of justice. Sharp v. Farmer, 20 N.C. 255; Blythe v. Lovinggood, 24 N.C. 20; Allison v. Norwood, 44 N.C. 414; Ramsay v. Woodard, 48 N.C. 508; Ingram v. Ingram, supra; Powell v. Inman, 52 N.C. 28; King v. Winants, 71 N.C. 469, Id., 73 N.C. 563; York v. Merritt, 77 N.C. 213; Covington v. Threadgill, 88 N.C. 186; Griffin v. Hasty, 94 N.C. 438; Culp v. Love, 127 N.C. 457, 37 S.E. 476; Owens v. Wright, supra; Marshall v. Dicks, 175 N.C. 38, 94 S.E. 514; Penland v. Wells, 201 N.C. 173, 159 S.E. 423; Florsheim Shoe Co. v. Leader Dept. Store, 212 N.C. 75, 193 S.E. 9.
For instance, in Blythe v. Lovinggood, supra, it is held: 'The law prohibits everything which is contra bonos mores, and, therefore, no contract which originates in an act contrary to the true principles of morality can be made the subject of complaint in the courts of justice'.
In this case commissioners, appointed to sell land for the State at public auction, declared, as one of the conditions of the sales, that if the highest bidder did not comply with his contract, the next highest should have the land. Defendant, second to plaintiff in highest bids, gave to plaintiff note for $100 for failing to comply with his bid. The court held that the transaction was fraudulent toward the State, and that such note was void, on the ground of its fraudulent consideration.
And in Ingram v. Ingram, supra, it is held that agreements between persons interested in an estate, the consideration of which is not to bid against each other at the administrator's sale, is against the public policy, and void.
In Marshall v. Dicks, supra, the Court through Hoke, J., restated the principle in these words: ...
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