11 Mo. 74 | Mo. | 1847
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a motion by Conway, the sheriff of St. Louis county, against Nolte, for refusing to pay for property purchased by him at a sale made by the sheriff. Conway having several executions against Mead & Beak-. man, levied them upon a leasehold estate belonging to the said defendants, which being advertised according to law, was sold at 12 o’clock ón the day appointed for the sale, when Charles Nolte became the purchaser, for the sum of $230. The money was required to be paid by five o’clock of the day of sale, as the officer thinks. Nolte not paying it, at a few minutes before five, the property was resold, when Mr. Cook became the purchaser for the sum of $50. Nolte did not return on that day, and had no notice of the second sale, and was not told that the property would be resold unless the money was paid by the appointed time’ It frequently happened that property was not paid for on the day on which it was sold, and a resale would not be made until weeks after the first sale. Nolte came to the sheriff on the morning after the sale and informed him he was ready to pay the money for the property he had bid for on the previous day, when the sheriff refused to take it, saying that Cook insisted on his purchase. Nolte resides in St. Louis, on Broadway, and has been a resident of the city for a number of years. He was not recollected by the sheriff at the time of sale. The sale to Cook was without any proclamation, and no bidder was present but one of the counsel for the plaintiff in one of the executions. The usual hour for selling property is at 12 o’clock. The sale was conducted by a deputy of the high sheriff, and took place on the 15th March, and the executions were returnable to the 3rd Monday of April following. The motion was overruled, and the sheriff appealed.
We have no hesitation in saying that the officer who conducted the sale
The statute says, that if the purchaser refuse to pay the amount bid by him for property struck off to him, he shall pay any loss sustained by a resale. Was the officer warranted under the circumstances in acting on the belief that there was a refusal on the part of Nolte to pay the amount bid by him ? By law, all sales must be made between 9 and 5 o’clock of the day for which they are advertised, and a person may have reasonably supposed that an officer would conform to these hours in making a resale. As Nolte, then, had, by consent, until five o’clock to pay the money, he could not have expected that a resale would have taken place on that day; and the offer of the money to the sheriff on the morning following, should have satisfied him that he was in error in supposing that Nolte had refused to pay the amount bid by him. Strictly, the sheriff, by his own agreement, had no right to make a resale until after five o’clock. If the money had been tendered precisely at five o’clock, after the resale had taken place, it will not be pretended that the first purchaser would not have been entitled to his deed; and if a tender at one time after a resale would be good, why not at another ? The
The judgment will be affirmed,