Dobbin v. Rex
Dobbin v. Rex
Opinion of the Court
1. The contention of the defendant that the charge for owelty was discharged by the execution of a note for the same is without merit.
In Jones v. Sherrard, 2 D. & B. Eq., 179, it was decided that in such cases the land is the debtor and the sole debtor, and that if a note is given by the owner to secure the charge, the land continues to be the primary debtor, and the note is only regarded as a collateral security.
Even if this were not so, the defendant could not now avail himself of such a defence, as he was a party to the motion in which it was adjudged, at November Term, 1883, of the Superior Court of Rowan Court, that a venditioni exponas issue to sell the land for the payment of the said charge.
2. Neither can the statute of limitations avail the defendant. He claims under Polly Dobbin and took the land cum onere. Ruffin v. Cox, 71 N. C., 253. The judgment in 1883 declared that the charge still existed, and under that judgment there was a sale at which the plaintiff purchased. It is plain that there is no error in the ruling of his Honor.
No error.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- N. M. DOBBIN v. GEORGE W. REX
- Cited By
- 7 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Charge on Land for Equality of Partition — Not Discharged by Execution of Note — Sale Under Vend. Ex. — Parties—Statute of Limitations. 1. A charge upon land for equality of partition is not discharged by the execution of a note for the same. The lan'd remains the primary debtor. 2. A party to a proceeding in which a venditioni exponas is issued to sell land to pay a charge resting on it for equality of partition cannot contest the validity of a sale made under such vend. ex. 3. A party acquiring land on which a charge rests for equality of partition takes the same cum onere, and the statute of limitations cannot avail him as against a purchaser at a sale made under a venditioni exponas, duly ordered in the partition proceedings.