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Scull v. Jernigan

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1838
22 N.C. 144 (N.C. 1838)

Summary

In Scull v. Jernigan, 22 N.C. 144, Elizabeth Sharpe was one of several heirs of Jacob Sharpe, and entitled to a part of his lands, which were sold for partition by order of court, and her part of the proceeds was paid to her guardian.

Summary of this case from Allison v. Robinson

Opinion

(December Term, 1838.)

The proceeds of land sold for partition under act of 1812 (1 Rev. Stat., ch. 85, sec. 7), to which an infant is entitled, remain real estate until the infant comes of age and elects to take them as money; and if the infant be a female and marry, and her guardian, to whom such proceeds had been paid by order of the court of equity, pay the same to her husband, upon her death they will descend as land to her real representatives; and this whether she married and died before or after she became of age, if in the latter case she never elected herself while sole to take such proceeds as money, nor consented, in the manner provided by law, after marriage, that her husband should so take them.

JACOB SHARPE died intestate, seized of lands in fee and leaving seven children, of whom an infant daughter, Elizabeth, was one. Upon a petition in the court of equity for partition, a sale of those lands was ordered and made by the clerk and master, who received the purchase money, and, by order of the court, paid it to the several heirs equally, the share of Elizabeth being paid to her guardian. In March, 1833, she intermarried with the defendant, Jernigan, and in January, 1834, died without having had issue. In July, 1833, the guardian of his then wife settled with Jernigan, and paid to him her estate, including her share of the price of the land. The heirs at law of Mrs. Jernigan were her sister, Mrs. Scull, and five brothers, of whom four conveyed to Scull all their part of her estate.

Iredell for plaintiffs.

No counsel for defendant.


The bill was brought by Scull and wife against Jernigan and the brothers, and it prayed that Mrs. Jernigan's share of the proceeds of the land might be declared to be real estate, and to belong to her heirs, and that the assignments to Scull might be established, and such parts of the fund as he or he and his wife might be entitled to might be decreed to Jernigan.

The answer of Jernigan insisted that he received his wife's estate in money, without reference to what it originally consisted, and, therefore, that he received it as personalty and was the owner of it.

In the court below there was a decree for the plaintiffs that Jernigan should pay one-sixth part of the fund, with interest since the death of his wife, to Scull and wife as her share, and four-sixths to Scull as belonging to him under the assignments. The defendant Jernigan appealed.


"We think the distinct (145) terms of the act of 1812, 1 Rev. Stat., ch. 85, sec. 7, furnish a plain answer to the single question arising between the defendant and the plaintiffs. That act is addressed to the court of equity, a well known doctrine of which was that land may be considered as money and money as land, according to the conversion made or to be made by the mandate of the law or the direction of the former owner. After enacting that there may be a sale of land for division, the statute then further enacts, by way of proviso, that if a party be an infant feme covert, non compos, etc., the part of the proceeds of sale to which such person is entitled shall be so invested or settled that the same shall be effectually secured to the person so entitled, or his or her real representative. The last are the material words, as the question is how the fund is to be treated after the death of the party, when claimed by the two classes of representatives, personal or real. To that purpose the language is unequivocal. It is secured to the real representative, and is, of course, land in this Court. The import of the statute is that as to such parties as could not, for want of capacity, consent to a conversion of their land into money, the sale — necessary to some purposes, and therefore unauthorized by the Legislature — should not operate as a conversion. The money is, therefore, as much land as if the act directed it to be a realizing fund, and reinvested in other land in severalty. It is true, that character is not indelible, but the person entitled may elect to take it as money, and any act that denotes that intention will be sufficient to remove the character of realty that attached to it. But to have that effect the election must be made by the person entitled, and not by another for him or her; and that person must also be capable in law of making the election. Consequently, it can never be done by one nonsane or an infant, nor by the committee or guardian of such persons; and the court never interferes so as to change the course of succession. Whether, therefore, the fund remain in (146) court, or be, by the direction of the court, invested in stocks by an officer of the court, or be invested in like manner, or in mortgages, or let out on personal security by a guardian, in all these conditions the nature of the fund continues unchanged, and the investment is only for the purposes of profit, and not of conversion. Had Mrs. Jernigan died an infant and unmarried, there can be no doubt that her heirs could have followed this money in the hands of her guardian as real estate. There is nothing in the case to alter their rights. It does not appear, indeed, what was her age when she married and died. But although a married woman may, in a particular manner, elect to have the money paid to her husband, there was in this case nothing done with that view by the defendant's wife. She is permitted to dispose of the money, because equity follows the law, and there is a legal method by which she could convey the land, if it had continued land. For this purpose the course of the court is to take the consent of the wife upon privy examination, either in court or by commission in the nature of a dedimus potestatem. But without such assent the person who has the fund as trustee for the wife has no authority to pay it to the husband; nor has the husband a right to receive it. Such unauthorized payment and receipt cannot, therefore, affect the nature of the fund; and it remained real estate.

The decree, consequently, did no injustice to the defendant, and as to him ought to be affirmed with costs. But it must be somewhat varied as respects the rights of husband and wife, as between themselves. It directs the wife's share to be paid to the husband and wife, which, in effect, is to pay it to him. Now, the ground of the decree for the plaintiffs is that the money is, as to them, land, which makes it the duty of the court to secure the feme's share for her or her real representatives, unless she chooses to part from it in the regular method. So much of the decree as directs the payment of that share to the plaintiffs must be remodeled and the money ordered to be brought into court, that it may be properly invested and settled.

PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.

Cited: Mebane v. Yancey, 38 N.C. 90; March v. Berrier, 41 N.C. 525; Dudley v. Wingfield, 45 N.C. 92; Bateman v. Latham, 56 N.C. 38; Allison v. Robinson, 78 N.C. 225; Black v. Justice, 86 N.C. 512; Tharington v. Tharington, 99 N.C. 126.

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Summaries of

Scull v. Jernigan

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1838
22 N.C. 144 (N.C. 1838)

In Scull v. Jernigan, 22 N.C. 144, Elizabeth Sharpe was one of several heirs of Jacob Sharpe, and entitled to a part of his lands, which were sold for partition by order of court, and her part of the proceeds was paid to her guardian.

Summary of this case from Allison v. Robinson
Case details for

Scull v. Jernigan

Case Details

Full title:ELISHA SCULL ET UXOR v. LEMUEL JERNIGAN ET AL

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1838

Citations

22 N.C. 144 (N.C. 1838)

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