Harris v. Gilchrist , 246 N.C. App. 67 ( 2016 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA15-437
    Filed: 1 March 2016
    Wake County, No. 08 CVS 12457
    POLYFIELD HARRIS, WILLIAM HARRIS, TONYA BARKLEY, SAMANTHA
    DAVIS, and PATRICIA PERKINS, Plaintiffs,
    v.
    MYRA H. GILCHRIST, VALERIE HARRIS, THE ESTATE OF THOMAS HARRIS,
    ROOSEVELT HARRIS, DOROTHY MORANT, and HELEN HOWARD, Defendants.
    Appeal by Plaintiffs from order entered 15 July 2014 by Judge Robert H.
    Hobgood in Wake County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 7 October
    2015.
    Rhodes Law Firm, PLLC, by M. Annette Rhodes, for the Plaintiffs-Appellees.
    Nathaniel Currie for the Defendants-Appellants.
    DILLON, Judge.
    Polyfield Harris, William Harris, Tonya Barkley, Samantha Davis, and Patrick
    Perkins (“Plaintiffs”) appeal from the trial court’s order (1) denying their claims for
    rents and profits and for attorneys’ fees and (2) apportioning the proceeds to which
    they are entitled from the sale of certain real property.
    I. Background
    This is a dispute among tenants in common – all lineal descendants and heirs
    of the late James Harris, Sr. – as to how the proceeds from the sale by partition of
    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    certain real estate (the “Property”) they inherited from Mr. Harris, Sr., should be
    divided.
    The record evidence tends to show the following:
    James Harris, Sr., had seven children, including a son, Thomas Harris. Mr.
    Harris, Sr., owned and lived on the Property.
    In 1993, four events occurred which are relevant to this action: (1) Mr. Harris,
    Sr., suffered a stroke and moved off of the Property. (2) He executed a document
    naming Defendant Myra Gilchrist (his granddaughter and Thomas Harris’ daughter)
    as his power of attorney. (3) Exercising her newfound authority, Defendant Gilchrist
    executed a deed (the “1993 deed”) conveying her grandfather’s Property to her father,
    unbeknownst to her grandfather’s other six children. (4) Thomas Harris moved onto
    the Property, where he lived, undisturbed by his siblings, until his death in 2008.
    In 1997, Mr. Harris, Sr., died. There is evidence that Thomas Harris’ siblings
    were unaware of the 1993 deed and believed that they each inherited an interest
    (along with their brother Thomas) in the Property and that the siblings allowed their
    brother Thomas to continue living in the house.
    In 2008, Thomas Harris died leaving two daughters, Defendant Gilchrist and
    her sister, Defendant Valarie Harris. His two daughters took possession of the
    Property, claiming 100% ownership as Thomas Harris’ heirs through the 1993 deed.
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    The other heirs of Mr. Harris, Sr., did not become aware of the 1993 deed until after
    Thomas Harris’ death.
    In 2010, three of Thomas Harris’ siblings filed this action against Thomas
    Harris’ estate and his two daughters claiming an ownership interest in the Property,
    contending that the 1993 deed was void. Further, Plaintiffs made a claim against
    Thomas Harris’ estate and his two daughters for rents and profits for the time
    Thomas Harris and his daughters were in sole possession of the Property.
    In 2011, after a hearing on the matter, the trial court granted partial summary
    judgment for Plaintiffs, declaring the 1993 deed void ab initio. This partial summary
    judgment order effectively declared that title to the Property was still held by Mr.
    Harris, Sr., at the time of his death and, upon his death, title passed to his seven
    children, as tenants in common. This order has not been appealed.
    Thereafter, Plaintiffs, as tenants in common, filed a petition with the clerk for
    a partition of the Property by sale.1 The clerk appointed a commissioner, who sold
    the Property for $53,000.00. The clerk entered an order dividing the proceeds from
    the sale among the tenants in common. This order was appealed to the superior court.
    The matter came on for a bench trial in superior court. The court entered its
    judgment dividing the proceeds of the sale. Out of these proceeds, the court awarded
    Thomas Harris’ daughters the value of the improvements placed on the Property by
    1 The heirs of Mr. Harris, Sr., who had not joined in the filing of the action were subsequently
    joined as Defendants, being necessary parties to the partition proceeding.
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    Thomas Harris during his lifetime (or betterments) and also a reimbursement for
    certain Property expenses paid by Thomas Harris during his lifetime. The court
    expressly denied a claim by Plaintiffs that they receive an award for the years of
    exclusive possession of the Property by Thomas Harris and his daughters. Plaintiffs
    entered written notice of appeal.2
    II. Analysis
    In this action, the 1993 deed, which purportedly conveyed Mr. Harris, Sr.’s,
    100% ownership in the Property to Thomas Harris, has been declared void.
    Accordingly, Thomas Harris’ daughters were tenants in common with Mr. Harris,
    Sr.’s, other heirs. A partition sale was ordered, and the Property was sold. This
    dispute concerns the trial court’s division of the sale proceeds.                     Specifically, we
    consider whether the trial court erred in making an award to Thomas Harris’
    daughters for the betterments and Property expenses and in denying Plaintiffs an
    award for the fair rental value of the Property for the period that Thomas Harris and
    his daughters possessed the Property.
    A. Value of Improvements
    Our Supreme Court has explained that our Betterment Statutes, now codified
    in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-340, et seq., were enacted “to introduce into the law of North
    2The trial court also denied Plaintiffs’ claim for attorneys’ fees. However, on appeal, Plaintiffs
    make no argument concerning this portion of the order; and, therefore, this issue is abandoned. See
    N.C. R. App. P. 28(b)(2).
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    Carolina an equity in favor of one who has purchased lands, and in the belief that he
    has acquired a good title thereto, has made lasting improvements, popularly called
    betterments . . . [and] that upon eviction by the true owner, such an occupier [is]
    entitled to an allowance for his improvements.” Pope v. Whitehead, 
    68 N.C. 191
    , 198-
    199 (1873) (emphasis added).       That is, prior to the passage of the Betterment
    Statutes, North Carolina did not recognize the right of an occupier – who is ejected
    from land that he believed, in good faith, that he owned – to receive from the true
    owner an accounting for the increase in the land’s value caused by his improvements.
    
    Id. at 199.
    Our Supreme Court further explained, however, that even before the passage
    of the Betterment Statutes, North Carolina had always recognized the equitable
    remedy of a tenant in common (as opposed to an occupier with no ownership interest)
    to receive an allowance for any improvements (s)he makes to property at the time the
    property was partitioned. 
    Id. at 199-200
    (stating that “in all cases of partition, a
    Court of equity does not act merely in a ministerial character, and in obedience to the
    call of the . . . [tenants in common]; but it founds itself upon its general jurisdiction
    as a Court of equity, and administers its ex aequo et bono [Latin for “according to the
    right and good”] according to its own notions of general justice and equity between
    the parties”). Essentially, the Betterments Statutes provided non-owners a remedy
    that equity already was providing to tenants in common.
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    Here, we consider the claim by Thomas Harris’ daughters for an allowance for
    the improvements made by their father to the Property, recognizing that Thomas
    Harris had no ownership in the Property until his father’s death in 1997, at which
    time he became a tenant in common with his siblings. See, e.g., Daniel v. Dixon, 
    163 N.C. 137
    , 138-39, 
    79 S.E. 425
    , 425-26 (1913) (recognizing that a tenant in common is
    entitled to a credit for the other tenant’s pro rata share of the value of the
    improvements he makes to the property during the time he had bona fide reason to
    believe that he was the sole owner under a deed which was later declared to be void);
    Harris v. Ashley, 
    38 N.C. App. 494
    , 497-98, 
    248 S.E.2d 393
    , 395-96 (1978) (holding
    that a tenant in common who improves property reasonably believing that he is the
    sole owner “is entitled to recover the amount by which he has enhanced the value of
    the property”). We note that the other co-tenants have made no argument concerning
    Defendants’ betterments claim, per se. Rather, they argue that the trial court erred
    in determining the amount of the allowance for the improvements.
    Our Supreme Court has held that the amount of the credit should be based not
    on “the actual cost in making the [improvements], but [on] the enhanced value they
    g[ive] the premises.” Carolina Cent. R. Co. v. McCaskill, 
    98 N.C. 526
    , 537, 
    4 S.E. 468
    ,
    474 (1887) (emphasis added). Our Court has likewise so held. 
    Harris, 38 N.C. App. at 498
    , 248 S.E.2d at 396 (holding that the actual expenditures are the “wrong
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    measure of damages” and that the tenant in common who improves the property “is
    entitled to recover the amount by which he has enhanced the value of the property”).
    In its order, the trial court made an award to Thomas Harris’ daughters for the
    improvements based on a finding that “[t]he value of the permanent improvements
    made by Thomas Harris is at least $31,599.00 based on the increase in the assessed
    [tax] value of the property from $26,090.00 to $57,689.00 during the period that
    Thomas Harris occupied the property.”                There is no other finding in the order
    regarding the value of the Property or the improvements made by Thomas Harris.
    We hold that the trial court did not err in the methodology used to ascertain
    the amount of the allowance. Indeed, the court appears to have based the amount on
    the change in the Property’s value caused by Thomas Harris’ improvements.3
    However, we agree with Plaintiffs that the evidence relied on by the trial court was
    not competent to show the amount by which the improvements (betterments) had
    increased the value of the Property. Rather, the evidence cited by the trial court
    3   The fact that the improvements may have been made before the co-tenants ever acquired
    title to the Property (that is, when Mr. Harris, Sr., was still alive and owned the Property) does not
    change the amount of the allowance assessed against the other co-tenants. The nature of the claim is
    not personal, i.e., against the person who happened to be the true owner at the time the improvements
    were made. Board of Comm’rs of Roxboro v. Bumpass, 
    237 N.C. 143
    , 146-47, 
    74 S.E.2d 436
    , 439 (1953).
    Rather, it is a right which only accrues when (1) in the case of betterments, the true owner asserts his
    claim to title, see 
    id., or (2)
    in the case of tenants in common, the time of partition, see Pope v.
    Whitehead, 
    68 N.C. 191
    , 199-200 (1873). It is the co-tenants/current owners (and not some prior true
    owner) who would be unjustly enriched by the improvements without the allowance. See, e.g., Harriet
    v. Harriet, 
    181 N.C. 75
    , 78, 
    106 S.E. 221
    , 222 (1921) (holding that a remainderman successfully
    claiming fee simple title to property is liable to the occupier for improvements made during the life
    tenancy preceding the remainderman’s interest).
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    merely shows that the Property had a tax value of $26,060.00 in 1993 and a tax value
    of $57,689.00 in 2008. Assuming that the tax value is competent evidence as to the
    property’s value as of a particular date, the fact that the Property was worth
    $26,060.00 in 1993 and $57,689.00 in 2008 does not tend to show at all how much the
    improvements made by Thomas Harris during that time added to the value of the
    Property. It is probable that much (if not all) of this increase in value was passive in
    nature, resulting from the normal inflation in real estate values generally over the
    fifteen-year period. Further, it may be that the 2008 value itself is too remote in time,
    as a matter of law, to establish the value of the Property as of the date it was
    eventually sold. On remand, the trial court shall make findings as to how much (if
    any) of the proceeds from the sale were attributable to the improvements made by
    Thomas Harris.
    B. Rents
    Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in concluding that they were not
    entitled to rents for the period that Thomas Harris and his daughters occupied the
    Property under color of title. We agree in part.
    Our Betterments Statutes generally allow for one against whom a claim for
    betterments is made to recover the fair market rental value of the property for the
    time the one claiming the betterments occupied the property. See, e.g., N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 1-341. Rent, though, which accrues more than three years before the filing,
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    may only be used to offset the betterments allowance (and not to establish a claim for
    affirmative relief). 
    Id. In any
    case, our Supreme Court has held that rents are not
    recoverable as an offset to betterments where one would not be entitled to rents in
    the first instance. Harriet v. Harriet, 
    181 N.C. 75
    , 78, 
    106 S.E. 221
    , 222 (1921).
    The equities in a situation involving tenants in common is similar: Though
    one tenant in common is “not liable for the use and occupation of the lands, but only
    for the rents and profits received [from third parties],” see Whitehurst v. Hinton, 
    209 N.C. 392
    , 403, 
    184 S.E. 66
    , 73 (1936), co-tenants may otherwise collect rents from an
    occupying co-tenant when there has been an actual ouster by the occupying co-tenant
    of the non-occupying co-tenants, see Roberts v. Roberts, 
    55 N.C. 129
    , 134 (1855).
    In the present case, both the principles involving co-tenants and the law under
    our Betterment Statutes apply. That is, Thomas Harris did not become a co-tenant
    until after his father’s death in 1997. Accordingly, during this time (1993-1997) the
    co-tenants (as heirs of Mr. Harris, Sr.) may be entitled to their pro rata share of the
    fair rental value of the Property (without Thomas Harris’ improvements) to the
    extent they do not exceed the allowance awarded for the improvements. In other
    words, the equity afforded to Thomas Harris’ daughters for the improvements made
    to the Property may be subject to an offset in the amount of the benefit Thomas Harris
    derived from possessing the Property between 1993 and 1997 when he had no right
    of possession, but rather possessed under color of title.
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    However, we hold that the co-tenants are not entitled to rents for any
    occupancy by Thomas Harris or his daughters after Mr. Harris, Sr.’s, death in 1997.
    During that time, Thomas Harris was a co-tenant; and the evidence does not show
    that there was an actual ouster by him of his siblings. Specifically, an actual ouster
    is “[a] cotenant’s clear positive denial of another cotenant’s rights in the common
    property[.]” Beck v. Beck, 
    125 N.C. App. 402
    , 404, 
    481 S.E.2d 317
    , 319 (1997). The
    mere fact that the 1993 deed was filed, creating color of title in favor of Thomas
    Harris, is not enough to constitute the actual ouster of the other co-tenants. Rather,
    “[t]he color must be strengthened by possession, which must be open, notorious, and
    adverse[.]” Cothran v. Akers Motor Lines, Inc., 
    257 N.C. 782
    , 784, 
    127 S.E.2d 578
    ,
    580 (1962) (emphasis added). In the present case, there was no evidence tending to
    show that Thomas Harris prevented his siblings’ access to the Property at any point.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the portion of the trial court’s order denying Plaintiffs’
    claim for rents and profits during the time of the co-tenancy (i.e. after Mr. Harris,
    Sr.’s, death in 1997) is supported by its findings and based on evidence in the record.
    C. Contributions
    Plaintiffs next argue that the trial court erred in concluding that Thomas
    Harris’ daughters are entitled to contribution for certain property tax and
    homeowner’s insurance expenses paid by Thomas Harris and his daughters between
    1993 and 2010.     We agree, in part.     Specifically, we hold that Thomas Harris’
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    Opinion of the Court
    daughters are entitled to contribution for said expenses which accrued after Mr.
    Harris, Sr.’s, death in 1997. See, e.g., Holt v. Couch, 
    125 N.C. 456
    , 460, 
    34 S.E. 703
    ,
    704 (1899) (holding that a co-tenant who pays taxes and other expenses necessary for
    the preservation of the property “will have a lien upon the common property to secure
    such reimbursement”). However, they are not entitled to contribution from the other
    co-tenants for said expenses accruing before Mr. Harris, Sr.’s, death because none of
    the co-tenants are liable for Property expenses which accrued prior to the time that
    they became owners.
    The 1993 deed being void, Thomas Harris became a co-tenant with his siblings
    upon their father’s death in 1997. Under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-363(b), “a cotenant
    who pays a greater share of the taxes, interest[,] and costs [may] enforce a lien in his
    favor upon the shares of the other joint owners in . . . any [] appropriate judicial
    proceeding.” Knotts v. Hall, 
    85 N.C. App. 463
    , 465, 
    355 S.E.2d 237
    , 239 (internal
    marks omitted), aff’d per curiam, 
    321 N.C. 119
    , 
    361 S.E.2d 591
    (1987). The Knotts
    Court stated that an exception to this rule may exist where the co-tenant paying the
    taxes and costs is in “exclusive possession” of the property. 
    Id. at 466,
    355 S.E.2d at
    239. The Court cited Webster’s Real Estate Law in North Carolina, Sec. 117 in
    support of the view that “a cotenant in exclusive possession is not entitled to
    reimbursement for taxes paid during the time he held the property exclusively.” 
    Id. (emphasis in
    original).    The Court, however, reasoned that a co-tenant’s “sole
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    HARRIS V. GILCHRIST
    Opinion of the Court
    possession” did not necessarily equate to “exclusive possession.” 
    Id. at 467,
    355
    S.E.2d 240
    . The Court went on to hold that there was “no basis for a finding of
    exclusive possession” where the occupying co-tenant made no attempt to withhold the
    property from the other co-tenants and where the other co-tenants made no demand
    to possess the property. 
    Id. In the
    present case, as in Knotts, neither Thomas Harris nor his daughters
    withheld the Property from the other co-tenants, and the other co-tenants never made
    any demand to possess the Property after Mr. Harris, Sr.’s, death. Accordingly, as in
    Knotts, the trial court did not err in awarding Thomas Harris’ daughters an allowance
    for the taxes and insurance paid by them and their father during the time they were
    tenants in common, as the record tends to show “sole possession,” not “exclusive
    possession.”   See 
    id. However, Thomas
    Harris’ daughters are not entitled to
    contribution from the co-tenants for the expenses which accrued prior to Mr. Harris,
    Sr.’s, death. Neither Thomas Harris nor any of Mr. Harris, Sr.’s, heirs had any
    ownership interest in the Property prior to Mr. Harris, Sr.’s, death in 1997.
    D. Other Arguments
    We note that Plaintiffs further argue that the trial court erred in failing to
    assess costs against Thomas Harris’ daughters based on Plaintiffs’ contention that it
    should have been clear to the daughters that their claim for betterments was easily
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    Opinion of the Court
    offset by Plaintiffs’ claim for rents. However, since we have held that the trial court
    did not err in denying Plaintiffs’ claim for rents, this argument is overruled.4
    Also, Plaintiffs contend that the case should be remanded for correction of
    certain mathematical errors in the trial court’s order.                   The calculation at issue
    includes the trial court’s finding as to the value of the improvements made by Thomas
    Harris. However, as we have reversed this finding of value and remanded the matter
    for the trial court to make new findings, Plaintiffs’ argument regarding the
    mathematical error is moot.
    III. Conclusion
    The parties were tenants in common in the Property.                       The Property was
    partitioned by sale.
    The trial court did not err in concluding that Thomas Harris’ daughters are
    entitled to an allowance out of the sales proceeds for the value of the improvements
    made by their father. However, the trial court erred in valuing the improvements.
    On remand, the trial court shall make new findings regarding this value. This value,
    however, may be offset by the fair market value of the rent of the Property (not
    including any portion of said fair market rental value attributable to the
    4 Plaintiffs additionally contend that the trial court erred in failing to assess costs against
    Defendants and in denying their motion for relief from judgment under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 6-21(7) and
    Rule 11 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. However, nothing of record in this appeal
    gives rise to an inference that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to tax the costs of this
    action against Defendants, the prevailing parties. Indeed, Defendants’ success on the merits belies
    the assertion that maintenance of their claims was improper.
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    Opinion of the Court
    improvements by Thomas Harris) for the period between the delivery of the 1993 deed
    and the death of Mr. Harris, Sr., in 1997. The trial court, on remand, shall make
    findings concerning Plaintiffs’ claims for this fair market rental value.
    Further, we hold that the trial court did not err in concluding that Thomas
    Harris’ daughters are entitled to an allowance for the taxes and property insurance
    paid by them and their father which accrued after the death of Mr. Harris, Sr.
    Any amount remaining from the net proceeds of the partition sale shall be
    divided among the parties based on their pro rata ownership of the Property.
    AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED.
    Judges GEER and HUNTER, JR., concur.
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