Citation Numbers: 167 N.C. 350
Judges: Allekt, Clark
Filed Date: 12/2/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The right of the owner of land to recover possession before a justice of the peace against one who has entered into a rental contract, and the limitations upon the right, are clearly and accurately stated by Justice Hoke in Hauser v. Morrison, 146 N. C., 249. He says: “The authorities of this State have established the principle that the remedy by summary proceedings in ejectment given by the landlord and tenant act (Revisal, sec. 2001 et seq.), is not coextensive with the doctrine of estoppel arising, where one enters and holds land under another, but is restricted to the case expressly specified in the act, and where the relation between the parties is simply that of landlord and tenant, and when, on the trial of such a proceeding, it is made to appear that the relation existing is that of mortgagor and mortgagee, giving the right to an account, or vendor and vendee, requiring an adjustment of equities, a justice’s court has no jurisdiction of such questions, and the proceeding should be dismissed. . . . And it is equally well settled that the jurisdiction does not extend to the relation of mortgagor and mortgagee and vendor and vendee, in which, although the mortgagor and vendee may technically be tenants at law, they are viewed in equity as the owners of the estate, and are allowed, in order to avoid the circuity of letting judgment go and then going into equity to enjoin the execution, to set up in one action under our present system their equitable title in defense to any action which may be brought to recover the possession. . . .
“There are decisions here and elsewhere to the effect that a mortgagee of property, after default, and a vendor, under an executory contract,
It is also held in Boone v. Drake, 109 N. C., 82, that the jurisdiction to determine whether there has been an abandonment of a contract of purchase is in the Superior Court, and in Cheese Co. v. Pipkin, 155 N. C., 396, that the jurisdiction of the Superior Court on appeal from a justice is entirely derivative.
In Boyett v. Vaughan, 85 N. C., 365, the Court said in a unanimous opinion: “It is the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace which, on appeal, gives jurisdiction to the Superior Court, and of course if the justice had no jurisdiction, the Superior Court could have none”; and again in Ijames v. McClamroch, 92 N. C., 365 : “The jurisdiction of the Superior Court in appeals from justice’s courts is entirely derivative. If the justice in such cases has no jurisdiction of the action, the Superior Court can derive none by the appeal.”
Both of these cases were cited and approved in Robeson v. Hodges, 105 N. C., 49, in an opinion written by Chief Justice Clark, in which he quotes from the first that “It is the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace which, on appeal, gives jurisdiction to the Superior Court, and, of course, if the justice had no jurisdiction, the Superior Court could have none, and, therefore, by allowing an amendment in the transcript, which enlarges the cause of action beyond the jurisdiction of the justice it must necessarily oust itself of jurisdiction”; and the same learned judge concurred in the opinion written by Chief Justice Furches in S. v. Wiseman, 131 N. C., 797, in which it was said: “In cases where bills are found in the Superior Court, its jurisdiction is original. But in cases of appeal from justices of the peace its jurisdiction is derivative, and it has no more or greater jurisdiction than the justice of the peace had; and if the justice had none, the Superior Court had none.”
If these principles are applied to the facts in the record, a statement of the questions involved in the appeal is sufficient to demonstrate that the justice did not have jurisdiction and that the action was properly dismissed.
(1) Is the plaintiff a purchaser for value? This is at least in controversy, as her own testimony may mean that she paid nothing for the
(2) Is the paper-writing of 25 April, 1895, a contract to convey, or an option?
(3) If a contract to convey, has there been an abandonment of the contract by the defendant ?
(4) If a contract to convey, and there has been no abandonment, what payments have been made thereon?
(5) If an option, was the writing at the foot of the paper, “I accept the above on the foregoing terms,” intended by the parties as an acceptance of the offer to sell?
(6). If not, has there been an acceptance since that time by payments made by defendant ?
(7) If an option, and the offer to sell has been accepted, has the defendant abandoned the rights acquired thereunder ?
(8) If there has been an acceptance and no abandonment, what amounts have been paid by the defendant?
(9) Did the defendant execute the paper spoken of as the rental contract under which the plaintiff claims?
(10) If so, was there any imposition upon him?
There is ample evidence on the part of the plaintiff that the defendant did sign the rental contract, that it was read to him, and that the transaction was open and fair; but the defendant testified that it was not read to him, and that he did not know what was in it.
It was in evidence that the defendant is ignorant, and that the paper was prepared by the agent and attorney of the plaintiff in South Carolina, and executed in his office there.
The defendant further testified in reference to this paper: “I have never made any settlement with Mrs. McLaurin for rent of this land. I cannot see the paper you have handed me without my specks. I have not got them with me. I am 60 years old and I can’t read it, because I can’t see it. I can read and write a little bit. The signature to the paper looks like my own. It kinder looks like it. I would not swear to it. If I signed it, I don’t remember about it. Mr. McCall told me to sign. That man scared me to death. I went down there and I went to see Mrs. McLaurin first and it looked like he got insulted. I don’t know what I done. I would not swear that is my signature. It kinder looks like it. I will not swear it is- or is not. I don’t remember what was in the paper. It was several years ago. I know I went to Mr. McCall’s office and he scared me half to death. I went to see Mrs. McLaurin first, then I went to the office. I remember that much.
“I don’t know whether that is my signature or not. I signed no paper giving away my home. I tell you at the time I was in there I was most
It is rare that a more complex situation is presented, and it is not only manifest that the title to land is in controversy, but also that equities may arise when the facts are definitely settled, which it was never intended should be committed to a justice of the peace for adjustment.
We have refrained from expressing an opinion upon the different questions in controversy because not necessary to this decision, and'it is better and fairer to the parties to await a fuller development of the facts in a court having jurisdiction of the whole case.
The only matter before us is whether the questions arise, and if so,' has a justice of the peace jurisdiction of them ?
It is but just 'to counsel for plaintiff to say that when this proceeding was instituted it appeared to them that the relation between the plaintiff and defendant was that of landlord and tenant, pure and simple, and that the question of jurisdiction arises on account of the claims of the defendant under an unregistered paper.
Affirmed.