143 Mo. 172 | Mo. | 1898
This is a proceeding by bill in equity to set aside a sheriff’s sale, and deed to certain land described in said deed, which was sold by said sheriff under the following circumstances.
Plaintiff sold to one J. R. Donneworth a farm of forty acres of land in Howell county, Missouri, for $2,400, on which there was paid at the time $1,050, and to secure the payment of the balance of the purchase money, Donneworth and his wife executed to plaintiff on the fourth day' of April, 1884, their note for $1,350 payable twelve months thereafter secured by mortgage on the land. When the note became due default was made in its payment, and plaintiffs placed the same in the hands of N. B. Wilkinson an attorney residing at Willow Springs in said county, to bring suit for the foreclosure of said mortgage. Wilkinson brought suit on the note and for foreclosure of the mortgage, upon which final judgment was rendered in the Howell circuit court December 6, 1894. The amount of the judgment was $1,571.90.
At the time of the rendition of the judgment and sale by the sheriff two of the plaintiffs resided in Colorado, and the other two in Cass county this State. On the nineteenth day of February, 1895, the clerk of said court, without the knowledge or consent of plaintiffs or their attorney, issued an execution upon said judgment in favor of two of the plaintiffs therein, viz., Eliza B. and James T. Davis, which recited that the judgment was rendered on the fifteenth day of December, 1894,
The trial court rendered judgment setting aside the sheriff’s sale, and also the deed made by him to the defendant. Defendant appealed.
Defendant objected to the introduction of any evidence under the petition, upon the ground that the facts therein stated if true, would not authorize setting aside the sale. This objection was overruled, and the action of the court in that regard is assigned for error.
Inadequacy of price alone will not justify the setting aside of a sheriff’s sale of real estate under execution, unless the price is so inadequate as to shock the moral sense and outrage the conscience. Then courts will interfere to promote the ends of justice. Railroad v. Brown, 43 Mo. 294; Cobb v. Day, 106 Mo. 278; Knoop v. Kesley, 121 Mo. 642. In the case at bar land worth at least $25 per acre was sold for about fifteen cents per acre. It would be difficult to conceive of a sale of land that would be more unconscionable than the one in question. To permit the sale to stand under the circumstances would be but little better than taking the property of one person and giving it to another, which the law does not now nor ever did permit.
Moreover the execution under which the land was sold was issued by the clerk of his own volition without the knowledge or direction of plaintiffs or of their attorney of record, the latter of whom resided in the same county. The sheriff did not even advise him that the execution was in his hands; or in any way inform him of the levy, or of his purpose to sell the property. Section 4895, Revised Statutes 1889, provides that “the party in whose favor any judgment, order or decree is rendered, may have an execution in conformity therewith.” It is not to be presumed with this statutory provision in force that the clerk would have issued the execution upon the judgment without direction from the attorney of record or some of the plaintiffs in the judgment, so that there was no laches upon their part in not knowing that an execution had been issued upon the judgment, the land levied upon, and advertised for sale under the execution. And it makes no difference that it may have been the custom of the clerk of the court to issue executions upon all judgments rendered at the next preceding term whether directed to do so or not. Plaintiffs and their attorney had the exclusive right to control the issuance of the execution, and the issuance of it by the clerk of his own accord was merely gratuitous upon his part, aud for any subsequent proceedings in pursuance
While a judicial sale should be upheld when it can be done without manifest injustice to a purchaser at such sale, and parties directly interested in the result thereof, the process of the court should not be used as a medium through which the property of one citizen is taken and given to another. As plaintiffs return the purchase money bid by defendant at the sale, he suffers no injury by setting the same aside, while upon the other hand the judgment debtors being insolvent, if the sale be not set aside, plaintiffs suffer the loss of many hundreds of dollars. The court below did right we think in setting aside the sale and sheriff’s deed to defendant for the land. It follows that no error was committed in overruling defendant’s objection to the introduction of evidence under the petition.
The judgment is affirmed.