Court Opinion

ID: 3652774
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:06:54.852493+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:19:05.746823
License: Public Domain

This was a civil action in ejectment, instituted in the Forsyth County Court, before his Honor, Oscar O. Efird, judge presiding. From an *Page 629 
order signed by the judge of the Forsyth County Court overruling a motion, plea and a demurrer filed by the appellant, Bernice E. Turner, to the amended complaint, as appears of record, Bernice E. Turner appealed to the Superior Court for Forsyth County. The appeal was heard before his Honor, W. F. Harding, judge presiding at the February Term, 1932, who signed a judgment sustaining the judgment of the Forsyth County Court, as appears of record. Bernice E. Turner excepted to the judgment of the Superior Court, assigned error and appealed to the Supreme Court.
The plaintiff sued defendant Bernice E. Turner in ejectment. In answer she alleged that the note secured by deed in trust under which the land in controversy was sold and at which sale plaintiff purchased was a forgery; therefore the sale under same was inoperative and void. The plaintiff was allowed to amend and filed an amended complaint. Robinson v. Willoughby,67 N.C. 84. In the amended complaint the plaintiff has not alleged two causes of action, but has only asked for alternative relief. The plaintiff's pleadings are not inconsistent. He alleges that the last deed of trust which was foreclosed was valid. The defendant denies this. The plaintiff then alleges that the three previous deeds of trust were valid. That is not in fact inconsistent with his first allegation. In other words, the plaintiff alleges that all four deeds of trust are valid. The defendant contends that none of them are. The plaintiff asks for alternative relief, depending on how the facts may be found.
The defendant, Bernice E. Turner, contends that the amended complaint is a departure. We cannot so hold.
C. S., 547, is as follows: "The judge or court may before and after judgment, in furtherance of justice, and on such terms as may be proper, amend any pleading, process or proceeding, by adding or striking out the name of any party; by correcting a mistake in the name of a party, or a mistake in any other respect; by inserting other allegations material to the case; or when the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense, by conforming the pleading or proceeding to the fact proved. When a proceeding taken by a party fails to conform to law in any respect, the trial judge may permit an amendment of the proceeding so as to make it conformable thereto."
In McIntosh, N.C. Prac.  Proc., part sec. 479, at pp. 510-11, is the following: "The plaintiff cannot in his reply set up a cause of action *Page 630 
different from that contained in his complaint. Such pleading is a departure, and is governed by the provision that the reply must not be inconsistent with the complaint."
McIntosh, supra, part sec. 487, at p. 516, says: "The statute permits an amendment in the discretion of the court, `when the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense.' This is found in connection with the amendment to make the pleading conform to the proof, but it has been applied generally to all amendments made under order of court. The pleadings of the parties fix the nature of the action, and it is not subject to arbitrary control, and the court has no authority to allow an amendment which makes a substantially new action, except by consent of the parties. `This would not be to amend, in any proper sense, but to substitute a new action by order, for and in place of the pending one.' This is in the nature of departure in pleading, and it may arise by introducing new allegations, which change the nature of the action or new parties which have the same effect." (Quoting from Clendenin v. Turner,96 N.C. 416, and citing other cases.) Olmstead v. Raleigh, 130 N.C. 243;Parker v. Realty Co., 195 N.C. 644; Gibbs v. Mills, 198 N.C. 417; Jonesv. Vanstory, 200 N.C. 582; Lykes v. Grove, 201 N.C. 254.
C. S., 507, in part, is as follows: "The plaintiff may unite in the same complaint several causes of action, of legal or equitable nature, or both, where they all arise out of (1) The same transaction, or transaction connected with the same subject of action," etc. Shafer v. Bank, 201 N.C. at p. 419.
The causes of action which plaintiffs rely on arise out of or are connected with the same subject of action — bottomed on the same indebtedness.
In Wallace v. Benner, 200 N.C. at p. 131, we find: "We think the principle applicable in this case is clearly set forth in Jones on Mortgages (8 ed., 1928), part sec. 1114, pp. 559-560: `There is clearly no scope for the operation of the principle of equitable subrogation in a case of ordinary borrowing, where there is no fraud or misrepresentation, and the borrower creates in favor of the lender a new and valid security, although the funds are used in order to discharge a prior encumbrance. In such case, the lender is treated as a mere volunteer in the transaction. But the rule is settled that, where money is expressly advanced in order to extinguish a prior encumbrance, and is used for this purpose, with the just expectation on the part of the lender of obtaining a valid security, or where its payment is secured by a mortgage which for any reason is adjudged to be defective, the lender or mortgagee may be subrogated to the rights of the prior encumbrancer *Page 631 
whose claim he has satisfied, there being no intervening equity to prevent. It is of the essence of this doctrine that equity does not allow the encumbrance to become satisfied as to the advancer of the money for such purposes, but as to him keeps it alive, and as though it had been assigned to him as security for the money," etc.
In the amended complaint is the following prayer for judgment: "(1) That the defendants, Bernice E. Turner and her husband, Edwin D. Turner, be removed from the possession of the lands, and that the plaintiff be placed in possession thereof; that the costs of this action to be taxed against the defendants, Bernice E. Turner and Edwin D. Turner. (2) That if it be adjudged by the court that the note and deed of trust, of 23 April, 1929, are forgeries as to the defendant, Bernice E. Turner, the court adjudge that the plaintiff is subrogated to the rights that Linville K. Martin would have had under any and all of the three previous deeds of trust, and that the court decree that the plaintiff is entitled to a lien on said lands to secure him in the sum of $2,640, with interest thereon from 23 April, 1929, and that the court appoint a commissioner for the purpose of foreclosing same, and that the net amount resulting from said foreclosure be applied to the indebtedness of Bernice E. Turner, Edwin D. Turner and Linville K. Martin to the plaintiff in the sum of $2,640, with interest from 23 April, 1929. (3) That the court grant the plaintiff such other and further relief as may be just and proper." For the reasons given, the judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.