Court Opinion

ID: 3677917
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:24:05.785921+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:09:04.435104
License: Public Domain

This case was heard at last term, Miller v.(94)   Scott, 184 N.C. 556, upon an "agreed state of facts" wherein the will was construed and the facts are set out. This petition to rehear is not based upon averment of error in the opinion of the Court rendered upon the agreed statement of facts then appearing in the transcript of the record, but upon the allegation that material averments were inadvertently omitted in the agreed statement of facts. The petition to amend the original case as sent up by the addition of other facts is agreed to by both parties, and they ask judgment upon the facts, as they more fully appear, in the amended agreement.
A precedent for entertaining this petition appears in Roebuck v.Trustees, 184 N.C. 611, in which the Court held that when on an appeal "a material fact was omitted from the case agreed, the parties will be given an opportunity to supply the omission by amending their agreed statement of facts and filing the same in this Court, or the cause will be remanded to the end that such additional facts may be found."
In this case the parties have agreed that there were material allegations omitted from the agreed statement of facts at the former hearing, and what these were. *Page 99 
By the will in this case, the testator gave all his property, personalty and realty, to his wife, "whatsoever it be, to have and to hold, and to use as she may see proper the balance of her life," and with power of appointment as to any residue left at her death. It appeared from the state of facts before us that the widow had sold a certain piece of property and the purchaser had doubts as to her right to make title to the same.
Upon the facts then appearing, the Court held that the case came under the decision in Herring v. Williams, 158 N.C. 1, which was to the effect that under the will of her husband, the plaintiff took only a life estate in the property, and could not convert it into a fee simple by the process of selling or conveying the same at her will.
The omitted facts now supplied by the amendment made by consent of both parties are that the will empowered the wife as executrix to pay his funeral expenses and all debts, and that the property in question was contracted to be sold by her for the purpose of paying funeral expenses and other indebtedness of the testator, and to reimburse her for the debts of the estate which she had advanced the money to discharge.
Upon this amended agreement as to the facts, it is very clear that the plaintiff, as executrix, was empowered to sell and convey the property in question, and the petition is allowed. The decision upon our former opinion is set aside, and the judgment is affirmed.
Petition allowed.
Cited: Roane v. Robinson, 189 N.C. 632; Gorham v. Ins. Co., 215 N.C. 200;Weinstein v. Raleigh, 218 N.C. 551.
(95)