Court Opinion

ID: 3654286
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:07:56.985964+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:23:42.419254
License: Public Domain

The plaintiff produced a grant for the land in question to James Gray, the father of the lessor of the plaintiff, dated in 1799, and showed that the said grantee died some ten or twelve years ago. He then offered a deed from Gray, the grantee, to Edna Johnson and Milly Sale, married women, dated in 1832, which said deed does not contain the word "heirs," or any other words of inheritance, though there is a covenant to warrant and defend the land aforesaid to them and their "heirs." The plaintiff then offered a deed from the said Edna Johnson and Milly Sale to the lessor, which is alike deficient in words of inheritance, and which purports to convey the premises in their names, those of their husbands not being included in the body of the deed, but both are affixed with their seals to the instrument after those of their wives. There were certain *Page 388 
forms of a privy examination endorsed on the latter instrument, and certain questions raised as to them, but these are rendered unimportant by the view taken of the case in this Court.
In submission to an intimation from the court, the plaintiff took a nonsuit and appeal.
We fully concur in the propriety of the nonsuit by the judge in the court below. In the deduction of his title, the lessor of the plaintiff claimed under a deed from one James Gray to Milly Sale and Edna Johnson, and a conveyance purporting to be a deed from the said Milly Sale and Edna Johnson, but signed and sealed as well by their husbands (they being married women) as themselves. The deed from James Gray passed a life estate only to the grantees, for the want of the word "heirs," and that was not enlarged into a fee by the covenant of warranty "to them and their heirs." Seymour's case, 10 Coke (504) Rep., 97; Roberts v. Forsythe, 14 N.C. 26; Snell v. Young,  25 N.C. 379.
The grantees having life estates only in the lands conveyed to them, their husbands could not become tenants by the curtesy, nor acquire any other interest in the land than the right to receive the rents and profits during coverture. One of the grantees having died, her interest, of course, terminated, so that no question can arise about the validity, as to her, of the alleged conveyance from her and the other grantee to the lessor of the plaintiff. But if it could, we should hold as to her, what we do as to the other, that it is void as being the deed of a woman laboring under the disability of coverture. Husbands are not mentioned in the deed as parties to it, and they could not become so by adding their signatures and seals to those of their respective wives. If this doctrine needed authority, it is found in the cases referred to by the defendant's counsel: Leefflin v.Curtis, 13 Mass. 233; Catlin v. Weare, ibid., 217; 2 Cruise Dig., 260, note 2. See, also, Kerns v. Peeler, 49 N.C. 226.
This view of the case renders it unnecessary to consider whether the privy examination of the wives was properly taken, for we suppose no person will contend that the privy examination of a wife to the execution of a deed to which her husband is not a party can be of any avail.
PER CURIAM.                                                Affirmed.
Cited: Harris v. Jenkins, 72 N.C. 186; King v. Rhew, 108 N.C. 699;Featherston v. Merrimon, 148 N.C. 207.
Dist.: Barnes v. Haybarger, 53 N.C. 82. *Page 389