Court Opinion

ID: 3675650
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:22:31.75925+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:36:07.354659
License: Public Domain

The defendant Flowers bought the land in controversy from one Barfield and executed his note and a mortgage on the land bought to secure the payment of purchase money. This trade and mortgage were made in 1888, and soon thereafter Barfield traded and assigned this note and mortgage to the plaintiffs. Thereafter, and before 5 March, 1895, the defendants paid the plaintiffs a part of the money due on their note as a part of the purchase money, and did ditching and clearing on the land which enhanced its value. And defendant Flowers says that the money so paid and the value of the ditching and clearing (which he calls improvements) amounted to more than the rental of the     (134) land, and he asks that he be paid the difference. These allegations are denied by the plaintiffs, who say they did not amount to more than the rental of the land, which the defendant has had since 1888 to 1895, inclusive; that on 5 March, 1895, the defendants conveyed the land to the plaintiffs in fee simple "in payment of the purchase money."
It is agreed by the parties, and made a part of the statement of the case on appeal, that the defendant does not now claim that there was fraud, nor does he want the transaction of 5 March, 1895, annulled and vacated, but wishes it to stand. It is also agreed and made a part of the case that there was no agreement that plaintiffs should pay defendants back any part of the money he had paid them, nor that they should pay him for what he calls improvements. But he alleges that the law implied a promise to pay the defendant what he had paid, and for the ditching and clearing, less the value of the rentals that defendant had received. And for this position he cites Beaman v. Simmons, 76 N.C. 43; Smith v. Stewart, 83 N.C. 406;Wilkie v. Womble, 90 N.C. 254, and other cases to like effect. But these cases do not sustain the defendant's contention. Beaman v. Simmons was where an incomplete sale of land was rescinded by mutual consent of the parties, and where there was also a promise to repay that part of the purchase money that had been paid. It is true that the Court there held that the law implied a promise to repay, without the express promise.
Smith v. Stewart was for rescission of a contract to sell, and is governed by the same principle as that announced in Beaman v. Simmons.
Wilkie v. Womble was where the bargain or refused to carry out a parol contract to sell land, after receiving a part of the purchase money, and the Court held he was liable for it and the bargainee    (135) might recover it back. All this is undisputed law, but none of it fits the defendant's case. His is not the rescission of a contract to *Page 132 
purchase, nor is it a parol contract to sell land, where the bargainor refuses to carry out the contract.
In this case the defendant Flowers bought of Barfield, and afterwardssold and conveyed to the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs derive their title from the defendant Flowers, and hold under him. They do not hold under an original title in themselves, as they would do if they had sold to the defendant and the trade was afterwards rescinded.
Defendant cites Hall v. Lewis, 118 N.C. 509, but that case has no application to the case under consideration, as no fraud is alleged in this case, and it is expressly stated that defendant wants the sale and deed of 5 March, 1895, from him to plaintiffs to stand.
As we have seen that this is a sale and not a rescission of a contract, the defendant has no ground to stand on in support of his contentions. There is no error, and the judgment is
Affirmed.