Court Opinion

ID: 3641573
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 05:59:03.342047+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:34:52.203797
License: Public Domain

In 1828, the defendant Enoch Ward, intermarried with the mother of the plaintiff, Eliza, who was then a child. The said Eliza then owned no property except a woman slave, named Sylvia, who afterwards bore a child; and these   (94) were sold by the defendant, Ward, who received the price. In 1835, the bill states, that one Rhodes, as the next friend of the feme plaintiff, caused a suit to be instituted against the said Ward, to recover the value of said slaves; and pending the action, in August of that year, he had himself appointed her guardian, and entered into bond with the other defendants as his sureties, and thereby defeated the said action. In September, 1842, the plaintiffs were intermarried; and in 1844, they instituted a suit at law upon the said guardian bond of the defendants, for an account of the value of said Sylvia and child, sold by the said Ward. To this action the defendants pleaded a release by the plaintiffs. The suit was referred to a commissioner to state an account, and is still pending in the Superior Court of Robeson county; and this bill was filed in 1846, for the purpose of restraining the defendants from availing themselves, in said suit at law, of the said release, given by the plaintiff, Meredith Barnes, to the defendant, Enoch Ward, on 6 January, 1843; which the bill alleges was without consideration, (except that the plaintiffs received a small hog worth about one dollar and fifty cents), and was obtained under circumstances of fraud and imposition — the said Meredith alleging, among other things, that he is illiterate and unable to read, and that he signed said paper, after much importunity by the defendant, Ward, and supposing it to be a mere receipt in full of his wife's claim. *Page 96 
Enoch Ward, in his answer, admits that he sold said slaves for the sum of $400, which he says was a fair price. He also admits that the sum of money expressed in said release, to-wit, five dollars, was not paid by him; but he denies that the same was fraudulently obtained, and avers that it was given in consequence and in consideration of the feme plaintiff's indebtedness to him, of which she well knew, for board and other necessaries furnished her, from the year 1828, down to the time of her marriage, in 1842; an account whereof, (including an item of one hundred and fifty dollars for her wedding dinner), is exhibited with the answer, amounting to $1,247. The other defendants adopt the answer of Ward, and with him they insist that the plaintiff, Meredith, well understood, at the (95)  time he executed it, the character of the instrument relied on by them, as a release from the plaintiffs' demand at law.
Upon this state of the pleadings, the cause was set for hearing, and by consent of parties transmitted to this Court.
The bill is filed to restrain the defendants from pleading, or using at law, a release given by the plaintiff Barnes to the defendant Ward. Ward, after he married the mother of Eliza Barnes, and before his appointment as her guardian, took into his possession a negro woman, the property of his ward. This negro he sold, and the action at law is upon the guardian bond to call him to account; and he has pleaded the release in his defence. The equity of the plaintiffs consists in the alleged fact that the release was given without any consideration. This fact would not avail the plaintiffs at law, because the instrument, being under seal, they cannot deny, in that forum, that it was given without consideration — they are estopped to deny it. But a Court of Equity is not so restrained. They may and will look into the consideration, and if they see that it was obtained by fraud or imposition, or by taking undue advantage of the situation of the party executing it, they will either set it aside altogether, or restrain the party holding it, from making use of it at law. The consideration mentioned in the release is five dollars; and the defendant admits no money was paid by him, but alleges that the feme plaintiff, his ward, was indebted to him in a sum much beyond the value of the negro; and to sustain his claim, he sets forth an account against her, amounting to the sum of $1,247. In *Page 97 
April, 1828, the defendant Enoch Ward married the mother of Eliza Barnes, the feme plaintiff, and in August, 1835, he was regularly appointed her guardian. The account exhibited by him against her commences with his marriage, and runs down to the time of the marriage of the plaintiffs, in 1842. From 1828 to 1835, the defendant is entitled to nothing for the board and maintenance of the plaintiff Eliza. It was at one time held, under the construction put upon the Statute 43 Eliz., ch. 2, and others on the same subject, that where   (96) a woman, having children by a former husband, marries a second time, her second husband was bound to maintain the children. 2 Bulst., 346. But this doctrine has been overruled, and it is now settled that a husband is not bound to support the children of his wife by a former husband. Tubb v. Harrison, 4 T. R., 118; Cooper v. Martin, 4 East., 75; 2 Show., 955. The step-father stands, in that respect, towards his step-child as any other stranger; and if, after the child comes of age, he promises to pay for his maintenance, an action can be maintained, because the step-father was not bound in law to support him: — if he had been, the subsequent promise would have been a nudum pactum. The defendant Enoch Ward was, then, under no legal obligation to maintain the plaintiff Eliza, and she was under no legal obligation to serve him. For that portion of the account, then, preceding the appointment of the defendant as the guardian of Eliza, he had no legal claim upon her, as she was under age at the time of her marriage. The answer of Enoch Ward states that Eliza had no property except that negro woman, who was sold by him with her infant for $400, which sum was, as he states, a full price. The law of this State does not suffer a guardian, in maintaining his ward, to exceed the annual income from the ward's property. Rev. Stat., ch. 54, sec. 22. A Court of Equity, under peculiar circumstances — as where the infant cannot be entitled to maintenance as a pauper, and from want of bodily health or strength, or from mental imbecility cannot be bound out as the law directs — may apply a portion of an infant's property to his maintenance, as a matter of necessity. Long v. Norcom, 37 N.C. 354. These remarks are made to show the fraudulent object of the defendant, Enoch Ward, and the oppressive use he made of the advantage he possessed, in procuring the release — considerations which could not be looked into in a Court of law. The answer states that the plaintiff, Eliza, knew she was greatly indebted to him. Doubtless his unfounded claim was not unknown to her; and if any thing were wanting to show the intention of the defendant, it would be made manifest by *Page 98 
the last item in the account, which is one hundred and fifty dollars for a marriage dinner, for a girl who it is stated in (97)  the answer had no property, and was a minor. Had the bill asked for an account, we should have ordered one; but the plaintiffs are content to take it in the action at law, and there is no doubt it will be so taken there as to do justice to all parties, and the defendant will receive all just and legal credits, including the pig. An injunction against proceedings in another Court is an auxiliary writ to restrain parties from proceedings before the ordinary tribunals, where equitable elements are involved in the dispute. The dissolution of the injunction, upon the coming in of the answer, is a question of discretion to the Court, whether on the facts disclosed in the answer, or as it is technically termed, on the equity confessed, the injunction shall be at once dissolved, or whether it shall be continued to the hearing. Here the object of the injunction is to restrain the defendant from pleading, or availing himself of the release executed by the plaintiff, Meredith Barnes, on the ground that it is iniquitous, without consideration, and contrary to equity and good conscience so to use it; and the defendant's answer fully satisfies us upon all these particulars, and that the equity of the plaintiffs is sufficiently confessed. Adams Equity, 196, Minturn v. Seymour, 4 Johns., Ch. 497.
The cause is before us for final hearing, and the injunction must be made perpetual.
PER CURIAM.                                    Decreed accordingly.
Cited: Mull v. Walker, 100 N.C. 50; Bean v. R. R., 107 N.C. 747.