Court Opinion

ID: 3647696
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:03:22.746534+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:09:22.576335
License: Public Domain

SEAWELL, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
This was a suit to foreclose a mortgage for $16,000 given to the plaintiff's intestate by the defendants to secure eight notes for $2,000 each, four of which have been paid, and to collect any deficiency after application to the debt of the amount received from the foreclosure sale.
The defendants in their answer admitted the execution of the notes and mortgage referred to in plaintiff's complaint, and in their further defense alleged that contemporaneously with the execution of said notes and mortgage a parol agreement was entered into between them and the plaintiff's intestate to the effect that in the event the defendants were unable to pay the balance due on said notes, said intestate would not foreclose said mortgage, but would accept in full satisfaction of any such balance due a reconveyance to him of the land described in the mortgage securing the notes, which were given for the purchase price of said land.
This case was before us upon an appeal of the plaintiff at the Spring Term, 1936 (209 N.C. 798), and a new trial was granted on account of the insufficiency of the issues submitted to support the judgment awarded, in that they left undetermined the question as to the defendants' inability to pay the balance due on the notes. However, the effect of the opinion was to hold that the evidence introduced by the defendants in support of their allegation of a contemporaneous parol agreement was competent and sufficient to carry the case to the jury upon proper issues presenting the questions raised by such allegation.
This appeal presents the same question which was raised and decided on the former appeal, namely, the competency, and the sufficiency thereof to carry the case to the jury, of the evidence as to the alleged contemporaneous agreement between the plaintiff's intestate and the defendants. The witnesses testified substantially the same at the two trials. This being so, the court was in error in holding that the evidence of these witnesses was incompetent and insufficient to be submitted to the jury. "A decision by the Supreme Court on a prior appeal constitutes the law *Page 537 
of the case, both in subsequent proceedings in the trial court and on a subsequent appeal. Newbern v. Telegraph Co., 196 N.C. 14; Nobles v.Davenport, 185 N.C. 162; Power Co. v. Yount and Robinette v. Yount,208 N.C. 182 (184)." McGraw v. R. R., 209 N.C. 432 (438).
New trial.
SEAWELL, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.