156 Mo. 653 | Mo. | 1900
This is an action, begun in the Greene County Circuit Court, on the 23d day of August, 1897, under the provisions of the act of March 15, 1897 (Laws 1897, p. ,74, R. S. 1899, section 650). The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner, in fee simple, and in possession of certain land in Greene county; that the defendant claims an interest in the lands adverse to the plaintiff, and claims to own some right, title and interest therein,
The extremely meager statement of the facts in the petition and answer make it necessary to refer to the facts developed on the trial in order to understand the nature of the controversy.
Conrad Eckas is the common source of title, and both parties claim as purchasers under execution issued upon judgments rendered against Eckas.
The plaintiff claims under a sheriff’s deed, made under execution sale, on December 23d, 1896, based upon three judgments rendered by the circuit court of Greene county on September 17, 1896, against Conrad Eckas, andón favor of Lawson Brothers for $159.18, the Logeman Chair Manufacturing Company, for $159.18, the same company for $393.25, and a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace of Greene county, on September 1, 1896, in favor of E. A. Rauch & Co., for $203.75, a transcript of which was filed in the circuit clerk’s office on September 4, 1896.
The defendant claims under a sheriff’s deed, made under execution sale on March 18, 1897, ba'sed upon sixteen judgments, two of which were rendered by the circuit court
The defendant assigns three errors: 1st, that the judgments under which the plaintiff derives title were paid and discharged before the sale under the executions issued thereon; 2d, that plaintiff acquired no title because the notice of the execution sale was only published for twelve days; and 3d, that he has title based upon his purchase at the execution sale upon the sixteen judgments.
The first contention of the defendant is that the judgments under which the plaintiff derives title were paid and discharged before the sale under the executions issued thereon. This is a clear misapprehension. The plaintiff bought and obtained an assignment of those judgments from the judgment creditors, and if those creditors would have obtained a good title at the execution sale, the plaintiff, their assignee, obtained the same hind of a title. No one would deny the right of a plaintiff in an execution to buy the property sold under the execution, and the assignee of such a plaintiff stands in the shoes of his assignor. [R. S. 1889, secs. 6043-4-5; Burgess v. Cave, 52 Mo. 43.] The plaintiffs in the execution parted with their judgments, but the judgments were' not satisfied, either by the defendant or any one for him, and it is only in case the defendant or some one for bim acquires the judgment that it is treated as paid. The defendant says in his brief that he claims that the plaintiff bought these judgments under a secret arrangement with the debtor, Echas, in order to hinder and delay Echas’ creditors, but there is no such issue tendered by the defendant’s answer, and not one word of testimony in the cáse upon which to predicate such a contention, and therefore no such question can be considered in this case. [Waddell v. Williams, 50 Mo. 1. c. 224.]
II.
The second error assigned by the defendants is that the sheriff’s sale passed no title to the plaintiff because only twelve days’ notice was given of the sale.
This, too, is a misapprehension. It is true as to the subsequently discovered -property there was only twelve
The' second notice can properly only be considered as unnecessarily cumulative. It does not even make tbe first notice an irregularity in tbe sheriff’s proceedings under tbe executions, and it is tbe established rule in tbis State that mere irregularities do not avoid sheriff’s sales. [Young v. Schofield, 132 Mo. 1. c. 668 and cases cited.]
III.
Tbe third assignment of error is that tbe defendant-bas title based upon bis purchase at tbe execution sale upon tbe “transcript judgments.”
The pith of this contention is that tbe transcripts of thirteen judgments of tbe justice of tbe peace were filed in
Section 6012, Revised Statutes 1889, provides that judgments shall be a lien “after the rendition thereof,” and if two or more judgments are rendered at the same term “as between the parties entitled to such judgments or decrees, the lien shall commence on the last day of the term at which they are rendered;” that is, it is claimed, such justice’s judgments become equal to judgments of the circuit court, when such transcripts are filed and such judgments entered by the circuit clerk in his docket of judgments, and Jordan v. Surghnor, 107 Mo. 1. c. 524, is cited as sustaining this view. Rut conceding that in this way the judgments of the justice of the peace became in legal effect judgments of the circuit court and equal in priority and lien, it will not sustain the defendant’s contention, for it is the settled rule in this State that where two judgments are equal, whether
So it follows in this case that the purchaser at the sale on December 23, 1896, got a good title to the property sold, by which is meant only that covered by the decree, as against the purchaser at the sale on March 18, 1897, and as the creditors under whose judgments the property was sold on December 23, 1896, were diligent and had their executions issued and levied first, they acquired a priority of claim to the proceeds of the sale over those creditors whose executions were not issued or levied until February, 1897. Or otherwise stated, the title of the plaintiff to the lands as the purchaser at the December sale, and to the proceeds of sale as assignee of the judgment creditors, is superior to the title of the defendant to the lands as purchaser at the February sale, and the defendant is not entitled to share pro rata in the proceeds of the December sale.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.