Summary
In Briant v. Corpening, 62 N.C. 325, the Court said: "The bill is filed for the purpose of converting a deed absolute on its face into a mortgage.
Summary of this case from Sprague v. BondOpinion
(January Term, 1868.)
1. One who asks to have an absolute deed corrected into a mortgage, must allege and prove that a clause of redemption was omitted, by reason of ignorance, mistake, fraud or undue advantage taken of the bargainor; therefore.
2. No relief will be given where the only allegations are, that the bargainor executed the deed in absolute form, "but intended simply as a mortgage, as will more fully appear by the proofs"; and, that the contract was that the defendant, "having paid the debt to H, took the deed absolute on its face but agreed to make a title bond at a subsequent day to the plaintiffs, conditioned to re-convey on the payment of the debt," etc.
BILL, filed to Spring Term, 1866, of CALDWELL; answers having been filed, and replication taken, at Fall Term, 1867, it was set for hearing upon the pleadings and proofs and transmitted to this court.
Malone and Bynum, for the complaints.
Folk, contra.
As the cause went off upon a question of pleading, it is not necessary to make a statement.
The bill is filed for the purpose of converting a deed absolute on its face into a mortgage. To accomplish this, it must be alleged and proved that the clause of redemption was omitted by reason of ignorance, mistake, fraud, or undue advantage taken of the bargainor. There is no such allegation in the present bill. In one place it is stated that the plaintiff "executed a deed of conveyance for the above described land to defendant Corpening absolute upon its face, but intended simply as a mortgage, as will more fully appear by the proofs." (326) To this is added that "plaintiffs show that it was the contract and agreement of the parties that defendant Corpening, having paid the debt to Harper, took the deed absolute on its face, but agreed to make a title bond at a subsequent day to the plaintiff's conditioned to reconvey on the payment of the debt, interest, etc., on the judgment in favor of Harper."
These are all the allegations on the subject, and not one of them amounts to a statement that the clause of redemption was omitted by reason of ignorance, mistake, fraud, or undue advantage. The necessity for such an allegation is shown in Brown v. Carson, 45 N.C. 272, and by several other cases in 3 Bat. Dig., Tit. Mortgage.
The defect in the bill for the want of proper allegations is not at all obviated by the statement that the facts "will more fully appear by the proof." A bill seeking relief in equity must contain all the necessary allegations, and then the proofs must correspond with and support the allegations, or there can be no decree in the plaintiff's favor. See Abstracts in 3 Bat, Dig., Tit. Pleading, Subdiv. XIII.
It is unnecessary to go into an examination of the answer or the proofs, as the bill does not state a sufficient case for the relief which it seeks; and it must therefore be.
PER CURIAM. Dismissed with costs.
Cited: Link v. Link, 90 N.C. 239; White v. R. R., 110 N.C. 461; Sprague v. Bond, 115 N.C. 532; Porter v. White, 128 N.C. 44.
(327)