Citation Numbers: 140 S.E. 90, 194 N.C. 542, 1927 N.C. LEXIS 144
Judges: Adams
Filed Date: 11/16/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On 1 October, 1924, James Hughes and his wife executed and delivered to the plaintiff, Lloyd Wright, a deed in fee simple for a *Page 543
tract of land in Emmons Township, Davidson County, containing about forty-seven acres. At the same time Lloyd Wright and his wife executed a mortgage to James Hughes to secure a part of the purchase price. The deed and mortgage were duly recorded. When these instruments were executed Lloyd Wright and his wife were minors. He became twenty-one on 12 March, 1925, she on 27 February, 1925; and on 3 July, 1925, they executed a mortgage on the land in question to A. F. Wright and J. D. Wright, respectively, the father and the uncle of the purchaser, to secure the sum of five hundred dollars. Thereafter on 12 February, 1926, Lloyd Wright and his wife signed a deed in fee purporting to convey to the heirs at law of James Hughes the land purchased from him and delivered it to the clerk of the Superior Court, instructing him to turn it over to the grantees upon repayment by them of $435, which had been paid as a part of the purchase price. The plaintiffs brought suit to annul the contract between James Hughes and themselves on the ground that by executing a mortgage to A. F. Wright and J. D. Wright they disaffirmed the deed the male plaintiff had received from his grantor and the mortgage they had executed to him. Analyzed, their contention amounts to this: Lloyd Wright is entitled to recover the purchase money he has paid upon reconveying the title, but the reconveyed title may be defeated by a sale under the mortgage to A. F. Wright and J. D. Wright. The result would be that the heirs of James Hughes would be deprived both of the purchase money and of the land itself. This the law will not permit. In Millsaps v. Estes,
The mortgage to A. F. Wright and J. D. Wright was executed on 3 July, 1925, after each of the plaintiffs had arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and the deed purporting to reconvey the land to the heirs of James Hughes was executed 12 February, 1926. The plaintiffs therefore are not in a position to restore the unencumbered legal title. The mortgages have not consented and are not parties to the action. Moreover, the execution of the mortgage by the male plaintiff to his father and his uncle was an express declaration that he claimed and asserted title to the land. Indeed, he covenanted that he was the owner of the land and had the right to convey the title by mortgage. This *Page 544
mortgage, instead of being in disaffirmance of the contract, was an act of ratification. True, the second conveyance of land by a person who has attained his majority may operate as an avoidance of a former conveyance made by the grantor when under age, as pointed out in Ward v. Anderson,
The motion for nonsuit should have been granted.
Error.