Judges: ClaiiK
Filed Date: 2/5/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The land was sold and conveyed to plaintiff in 1884 by the sheriff of Cumberland County under an execution which issued in 1882 on a judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the deceased husband of the defendant, rendered by a justice of the peace in 1873, and duly docketed in the Superior Court. Neither the judgment nor the sheriff's deed showed that the judgment was given on a note executed prior to 1868.
The defendant insisted that she was entitled to a homestead in the land; if not to a homestead, then to dower.
The judgment docket of the Superior Court was introduced, showing that the transcript was docketed on 4 April, 1873, the judgment bearing interest from 1 April, 1873. The loss of the note and original papers being admitted, parol evidence was admitted to prove that the note was dated in 1861.
The sheriff who sold the land and executed the deed to the (376) plaintiff testified that the defendant in the execution had no other property than that which was sold.
The defendant testified that she was the widow of the execution debtor, and that neither he nor she had any children.
It being left to his Honor to find the facts and declare the law thereon, he found from the evidence that the note on which the judgment was based was an old note, executed in 1861; that the execution debtor owned no other land at the time of the sale, and that the defendant was not entitled to a homestead in the land, but that the plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the possession thereof, subject to the defendant's dower, etc.
From the judgment rendered the defendant appealed.
It was competent to show by parol testimony that the note upon which the judgment was rendered (under which the land was sold) was executed prior to 1868. Dail v. Sugg,
It now appears that the judgment was upon a debt contracted in 1861. The defendant in the execution was therefore not entitled to a homestead. The judgment below correctly declared the purchaser the owner of the land and entitled to recover, subject only to the widow's right of dower, if entitled thereto (Patton v. Asheville,
AFFIRMED.
Cited: Davis v. Evans,
(378)