Court Opinion

ID: 3652796
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:06:55.6757+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:19:07.588699
License: Public Domain

Has a tenant by the curtesy initiate sufficient interest in land to support an action for specific performance, so far as his interest is concerned, under a contract of sale signed by said tenant and his wife, where the wife's privy examination is not taken? We think so.
While it is true that a husband as tenant by the curtesy initiate, under our present Constitution and laws, has no present estate in his wife's land which he may sell or lease, without his wife's joinder, or which may be taken under execution against him (Cecil v. Smith, 81 N.C. 285), nevertheless, after birth of issue alive, curtesy initiate is still regarded with us as a valuable interest which may ripen into an estate of freehold, or curtesy consummate as at common law. Jackson v. Beard,162 N.C. 105, 78 S.E. 6; Jones v. Coffey, 109 N.C. 515,14 S.E. 84; Walker v. Long, 109 N.C. 510, 14 S.E. 299. Indeed, inThompson v. Wiggins, 109 N.C. 508, 14 S.E. 301, it was said that "He has, by the curtesy initiate, a freehold interest, but not an estate, in the property."
But without regard to the precise interest which a tenant by the curtesyinitiate may have, the question presently presented is whether the contract of sale, set out in 196 N.C. 508, is valid and capable of being specifically enforced so far as the interest of the male defendant is concerned. We see no valid reason for disturbing the original opinion heretofore filed in the case.
Petition dismissed.