
    C. S. McARTHUR v. E. A. GRIFFITH, admr., et al.
    (Filed 6 May, 1908).
    1. Parties — Executors and Administrators — Heirs—Real Estate — No Privity.
    There is no privity of interest between the administrator of deceased and his widow and heirs at law in the deceased’s real estate, and it was not error of the Judge in the lower court to permit the widow and heirs at law to become parties to and fully defend a suit affecting their interest in deceased’s lands.
    2. Cloud on Title — Action—Heirs—Pleadings—Judgment—Estoppel.
    A judgment in an action brought by the widow and heirs at law •to remove a cloud upon their title to land descended to them, wherein it was adjudicated that a note secured by a mortgage had been fully paid and discharged, may be successfully pleaded in bar to an action subsequently brought to foreclose by the administrator of the mortgage creditor.
    3. Cloud on Title, What is — Equity Jurisdiction.
    When a lien by mortgage appears by record to be valid upon lands descending to the widow and heirs at law, but which was paid by their intestate, it is a cloud upon their title within the jurisdiction and province of a court of equity to remove, and their cause of action will therein lie for that purpose; otherwise when such adverse claim of title appears to be void upon its face.
    4. Removal of Causes — Venue, Objection to — Waiver.
    An objection that a suit was instituted in the wrong county relates to the venue and not to the jurisdiction. In the absence of a written demand that the suit be removed to the proper county before the time to answer has expired (Revisal, sec. 425), the objection will be deemed as waived.
    5. Same — Pleadings.
    A prayer in the answer that proceedings b.e stayed by injunction until an issue in a similar suit between the same parties in another county be determined is not a written demand for the removal of the cause, but if otherwise it would be deemed as waived when the cause was proceeded with to judgment without exception.
    AotioN tried before Ferguson, J., and a jury, at November Term, 1906, of Davidson.
    This action was brought to foreclose a mortgage given by J. P. Hannah, on 5 March, 1895, to secure a note for $2,230.73 executed by bim to R. M. McArtbur. The parties waived a jury trial, and the presiding Judge, with their consent, found the following facts:
    1. That R. M. McArthur is dead and C. S. McArthur is his administratrix. J. P. Hannah is also dead and E. A. Griffith is his administrator.
    2. In August, 1903, E. A. Griffith, as administrator of J. P. Hannah, filed his petition in Davidson County before the Clerk of the Superior Court against the widow and heirs at law of J. P. Hannah, seeking to sell the land of his intestate in that county to pay the debts of his intestate, among others the debt to C. S. McArthur, administratrix of R. M. McArthur. The defendants answered that the debt had been fully paid and satisfied by J. P. Hannah in his lifetime. Upon joining issue the case was transferred to the civil issue docket for trial before ,a jury. Pending the cause, C. S. McArthur, administratrix of R. M. McArthur, was made party plaintiff by order of the court, and she filed a complaint and the defendants filed an answer thereto. At November Term, 1905, of Davidson Superior Court the plaintiffs submitted to a voluntary nonsuit.
    3. On 14 November, 1905, after judgment of nonsuit was entered, the widow and heirs of J. P. Hannah, defendants in this action, commenced an action in Davidson County Superior Court against C. S. McArthur, administratrix of R. M. McArthur, and in their complaint alleged the execution of the note and mortgage, and also that the same had been fully paid by J. P. Hannah in his lifetime, and prayed that they be cancelled and the cloud upon their title be thus removed. The defendant in that case filed an answer denying payment.
    4. At November Term, 1906, the case came on for trial before Judge Ferguson and a jury, and, a verdict having been returned for the plaintiffs to the effect that the debt had been paid and the mortgage thereby satisfied, it was adjudged by the court that the note and mortgage be surrendered by the defendant and cancelled.
    
      5. Tbe present action was brought in Eorsyth County, on 27 November, 1905, to collect the note'and for foreclosure of the said mortgage, and ,a complaint and answer filed. The defendants herein, except the administrator, pleaded the judgment in Davidson Superior Court in bar of this action. The administrator, E. A. Griffith, failed to answer, but by leave of the court the other defendants, the widow and heirs of I. P. Hannah, were made parties defendant and filed an answer.
    Upon the foregoing facts, the court being of the opinion that the plaintiff is estopped, it was adjudged that the plaintiff take nothing by this action, and that defendants go without day and recover of the plaintiff their costs, to be taxed by the Clerk. Plaintiff excepted and appealed.
    
      ■J. 8. Grogan for plaintiff.
    
      Watson, Buxton & Watson for defendants.
   WaleeR,, J.,

after stating the case: The order of the court by which the widow and heirs of J. P. Hannah were permitted to become defendants and to answer the complaint was a proper one. The administrator, E. A. Griffith, had failed to answer and resist the plaintiff’s recovery of a satisfied claim which the latter sought to have paid again by subjecting the land which belonged to the widow and heirs, and which the ancestor of the latter had mortgaged to secure the original debt, to the payment of the alleged debt. Why the administrator refused to plead or to perform his plain duty as a fiduciary we were not told. It is manifestly just that under such circumstances the heirs and widow should be given the opportunity to resist the foreclosure of the mortgage and to prevent the land from being applied to the payment of a debt which does, not exist. It has been expressly so held. Bevers v. Burk, 88 N. C., 446; Speer v. James, 94 N. C., 417; Tilley v. Bivens, 112 N. C., 348. In the cases cited the heir was allowed to plead the statute of limitations. Why not be permitted to show in defense of their right to the land, freed from the encumbrance, that the debt had actually been paid ? In Shewne v. Vanderbout, 1 Russell and Milne, 347, the Court permitted .a residuary legatee to defend in a creditor’s suit, and in Steele v. Steele, 64 Ala., 438, it was held that the heir is at liberty to dispute any and every debt that may be presented against the estate of his ancestor, and may set up every defense thereto which is legally sufficient. The decision rests upon the ground that there is no privity between the administrator and the heir, and hence the former cannot bind the latter by either his admissions or omissions; that while by omitting to plead the statute or by an express promise to pay he could revive a claim so as to charge the personal assets, he has no such power over the real assets, which descend directly to the heir, as to whom all his acts are res inter alios acta. The case last mentioned was citecl with approval in Bevers v. Park, supra. In the latter case the Court says that the object of the proceeding by the creditor is to deprive the heirs of their land, and it is but reasonable that they should be permitted to resist the suit and save their land, if legally possible. And if they had the right to resist it, why should they not be allowed to avail themselves of all the rules of pleading, practice and evidence necessary for the purpose %

The judgment recovered in the Superior Court of Davidson County in the suit between the widow and heirs at law of J. P. Hannah, as plaintiffs, and the present plaintiff, as defendant, constitutes a complete bar to the plaintiff’s recovery in this suit. The rule is that a question once determined between the parties cannot again be brought in question, and the former decision may be relied upon as an estoppel, or, more properly speaking, a bar, to .any action that may thereafter be tried involving the same point. “A judicial determination of the issues in one action is a bar to a subsequent one between the same parties having substantially the same object in view, although the form, of the latter and the precise relief sought is different from the former.” Lumber Co. v. Lumber Co., 140 N. C., 437; Edwards v. Baker, 99 N. C., 258; Tuttle v. Harrill, 85 N. C., 456. Tbe issue in tbe Davidson County suit was whether the debt bad been paid, and tbe issue here is precisely tbe same, although the position of the parties on the record is reversed.

The widow and heirs of J. P. Hannah had the right to bring the action to remove the cloud from their title. 7 Cyc., pp. 255, 256, and 6 Cyc., pp. 319, 320, and notes. Equity interferes to remove clouds upon title, because they embarrass the owner of the property clouded and tend to impede his free sale and disposition of it. Byne v. Vivian, 5 Vesey, 604; Ward v. Dewey, 16 N. Y., 531; Bissell v. Kellogg, 60 Barbour, 629. A cloud upon title is in itself a title or encumbrance, apparently valid, but in fact invalid. It is something which, nothing else being shown, constitutes an encumbrance upon it or a defect in it — something that shows prima facie the right, of a third party either to the whole or to some interest in it, or to a lien upon it. 2 Cooley on Taxation (3d Ed.), p. 1448; Detroit v. Martin, 34 Mich., 170. When the claim, which is a lien if in force, appears to be valid on the face of the record, and the defect or invalidity can only be made to appear by extrinsic evidence, particularly if the proof of it depends upon oral testimony, it generally presents a case invoking the aid of a court of equity to remove it as a cloud upon the title. Crocke v. Andrews, 40 N. Y., 547; Sanxay v. Hunger, 42 Ind., 44; 2 Story Eq. Jur. (13th Ed.), secs. 698, 699, 700. If, on the other hand, the ( title be void on its face — if it be a nullity, a mere feto de se, when produced — so that an action based upon it will fall of its own weight, as has been said, then the title of the party is not considered as necessarily clouded thereby. Busbee v. Macy, 85 N. C., 329; Busbee v. Lewis, 85 N. C., 332; Browning v. Lavendar, 104 N. C., 69; Thompson v. Etowah Iron Co., 91 Ga., 538; Lick v. Bay, 43 Cal., 83. This equity is also enforced for the reason that the proof of the party upon wbicb be relies to show tbe invalidity of the encumbrance may be lost by lapse of time. Browning v. Lavendar, supra. The widow and heirs of J. P. Hannah properly brought their action to have the note and mortgage cancelled, so as to remove the cloud from their title. Byerly v. Humphrey, 95 N. C., 151; Murray v. Hazell, 99 N. C., 168. The doctrine relating to cloud upon title is founded upon true principles of equity jurisprudence, which is not merely remedial, but is also preventive of injustice. If an instrument ought not to be used or enforced, it is against conscience for the party holding the same to retain it, since he can only do so with some sinister or wrongful design. If it is a negotiable instrument it may be used for a fraudulent or improper purpose. If it is a deed purporting to convey lands, which creates an apparent encumbrance, its existence in an uncancelled state necessarily is calculated to throw a cloud over the title. 2 Story Eq. Jur. (13th Ed.), sec. 700, and notes.

Whether the action was properly brought in the Superior Court of Davidson County or should have been brought in the Superior Court of Forsyth County is a question we need not decide. It relates to the venue or place of trial, and not to the jurisdiction. If the action was not brought in'the proper county it could be tried therein, unless the defendant, who is the plaintiff in this action, demanded in writing, before the time for answering expired, that the trial be had in the proper county. Revisal, sec. 425. This he did not do, as we think, and the objection to the venue was thereby waived. Leach v. Railroad, 65 N. C., 486; Lafoon v. Shearin, 91 N. C., 370; Cloman v. Staton, 78 N. C., 235; McMinn v. Hamilton, 77 N. C., 300. His counsel contends that the demand was made in the answer. If it was so made it might perhaps have been sufficient in respect to time. Rankin v. Allison, 64 N. C., 673; Shaver v. Huntley, 107 N. C., 623. But we do not consider what is stated in the answer and relied on by the plaintiff, for the purpose was in law a sufficient demand for tbe removal of tbe cause. We quote from tbe answer: “Wherefore tbe defendants pr.ay that tbe plaintiff’s action be dismissed and that tbe plaintiff be restrained by injunction from any proceeding whatsoever against tbe defendants until after tbe determination of tbe issues joined in Eorsyth County against E. A. Griffith, administrator of J. P. Hannah, deceased, is determined.” This is clearly not a prayer for tbe removal of tbe cause, but for a stay in tbe prosecution of any action until tbe Eorsyth suit should be determined. Besides, if tbe application was made, and in proper form, it was not pressed, tbe court was not requested to pass upon it, no exception was taken to any ruling of tbe court in regard to it, and there was no appeal from tbe judgment rendered in tbe case. If made, therefore, at all, it was clearly abandoned.

We conclude that bis Honor, Judge Justice, took the right: view of tbe case upon tbe facts found by him, and correctly held that tbe judgment in tbe Davidson suit barred tbe plaintiff’s recovery in this action.

Affirmed.  