Dehority v. Paxon

115 Ind. 124 | Ind. | 1888

Mitchell, J.

Petition by Dehority to reinstate the record of an alleged unsatisfied judgment and decree foreclosing certain mortgages, entered at the June term, 1880, of the Madison Circuit Court, in favor of Frederick Tykle against Joseph R. Paxon and David Foland, for eighteen hundred dollars and upwards, which record it is alleged had been destroyed by fire, in a general destruction of the records of the Madison Circuit Court, resulting from the burning of the court-house on the 10th day of December, 1880.

It is alleged that the judgment and decree had been duly assigned by Tykle to.Dehority. Simon and others, who were parties to the original decree, and were alleged to be the holders of junior mortgages on the real estate mortgaged to Tykle, answered, admitting the facts stated in the complaint or petition, but in avoidance they averred that both the *125mortgages foreclosed by Tykle had been executed as a security for the same debt; that one covered certain real estate upon which the defendants held junior mortgagés, to secure debts owing to them respectively by the mortgagors, and that the other, which had been duly foreclosed by the plaintiff’s assignor, covered a large amount of personal property owned by the mortgagors, of the value of $2,500, which property the plaintiff had caused to be sold by the sheriff on a certified copy of the decree of foreclosure mentioned in the complaint.

It is alleged that at the sale the plaintiff bid off and purchased the personal property covered by the chattel mortgage, for the nominal price of $232, although it was reasonably worth $2,500. As a conclusion drawn from the foregoing facts, the pleader states that the judgment and decree taken by Tykle, and by him assigned to the plaintiff, have been fully satisfied by the above mentioned sale.

The court held the answer sufficient on demurrer, and the only question involved relates to the propriety of this ruling.

Counsel for appellee assert and seek to maintain the proposition, that whenever property o'f a judgment debtor, of a value sufficient to satisfy the judgment, has been levied on, and the title of the judgment debtor has been divested and lost, whether by an execution sale or otherwise,‘the judgment is to be deemed satisfied to the extent of the value of the property thus taken. At least, it is said, this must be the rule as respects the execution plaintiff and those holding junior encumbrances. The proposition is not maintainable. It has often been broadly stated that a levy upon the judgment debtor’s personal property of sufficient value to satisfy the execution, was, per se, an extinguishment of the judgment, and hence a satisfaction of the execution. The inaccuracy of this statement has been repeatedly shown. Such a levy is notan absolute satisfaction, but is to be considered a prima facie payment, or satisfaction sub modo.

If it appears that the levy has been regularly exhausted *126by a sale duly made, and that the sale has failed to produce a sum sufficient to satisfy the judgment, the levy and sale will be regarded as satisfaction pro tanto, and a new execution may be had for the residue.

The most that can be said is, that a levy upon goods of sufficient value to pay the judgment raises a presumption that the execution is satisfied. This presumption may be overcome by a return of the officer showing that the’property had been duly and lawfully sold, and that a sale regularly made had not been productiveof sufficient to pay the debt. McIntosh v. Chew, 1 Blackf. 289 ; Neff v. Hagaman, 78 Ind. 57; McCabe v. Goodwine, 65 Ind. 288; Richey v. Merritt, 108 Ind. 347; United States v. Dashiel, 3 Wall. 688; Trapnall v. Richardson, 13 Ark. 543 (58 Am. Dec. 338, and note); Banta v. McClennan, 14 N. J. Eq. 120.

As will be observed, the application of the rule relating to the effect of a levy is confined almost exclusively to cases where it appeared that, after sufficient property had been seized to satisfy the execution, the property had been wasted, or the levy released or in some other way rendered ineffectual, without the consent of a surety or other person occupying such a relation to the debt as entitled him to insist upon a sale of the property. In all such cases it is incumbent on the plaintiff to show why the property thus taken was not sold in the regular course, and the proceeds applied to the extinguishment of the debt. Johnson v. Tuttle, 9 N. J. Eq. 365.

The purpose of issuing an execution is to obtain satisfáction of the debt. The law will not tolerate the levying upon property merely as a security, or to protect the property for the accommodation of the debtor. Parys & Co.’s Appeal, 41 Pa. St. 273; Landis v. Evans, 113 Pa. St. 332; Appeal of Larzelere, 13 Atl. Rep. 85.

Where, however, property has been levied upon and regularly sold, and the proceeds properly applied, we know of no authority, nor can we conceive of any sound principle, *127which would permit an inquiry into the actual value of the property, with a view of showing that the judgment had been satisfied by the levy, without regard to the sum produced by the sale.

When property has been sold at public sale, after due and lawful notice, in pursuance of a decree of a court, parties are bound by the value of the property as fixed by the highest bidder, until the sale is set aside or in some Way impeached for fraud or irregularity. It is' to be presumed that property sold at a regular sale fetches its true value,” while a contrary presumption arises as to irregular sales. Horn v. Ross, 20 Ga. 210 (65 Am. Dec. 621).

If the price was so grossly inadequate as to shock a correct mind, this inadequacy of price might furnish a strong presumption of fraud or irregularity, and entitle the party injured to have the sale set aside upon seasonable application. Fletcher v. McGill, 110 Ind. 395.

If, however, parties to the decree affirm the sale, they also affirm the price at which the property sold. They can not, without questioning the validity and regularity of the sale, enter upon an inquiry concerning the value of the property.

The answer in the present case shows that the plaintiff’s assignor foreclosed his chattel mortgage by proceedings in chancery. The appellees were parties to that decree. The sheriff afterwards took possession of the mortgaged chattels and sold them pursuant to the order of the court. This sale,. as the answer affirmatively shows, produced an amount insufficient to pay the debt. Without in any manner attacking the sale or questioning its regularity, the appellees propose to satisfy the appellant’s judgment by extraneous proof that the property sold and purchased by him was of sufficient value to satisfy the judgment. This can not be done.

When a chattel mortgage has been foreclosed, either by proceedings in chancery, or in pursuance of a power, the price paid by the highest bidder, at an unimpeached sale regularly made, will, in the absence of fraud, be presumed to *128have conclusively fixed the value of the property for the pur-, pose of being applied to the debt. Lee v. Fox, 113 Ind. 98.

Filed May 30, 1888.

There would be no propriety in requiring a mortgagee to go through the ceremony of foreclosing his mortgage and making a public sale of the property, if in the end he is to be charged with the amount that parties interested may be able to show the property was actually worth, without regard to the amount the sale produced. In contemplation of law, the only purpose of making a sale of mortgaged chattels, the legal title of which is conditionally in the mortgagee, is to ascertain their value as applicable to the mortgage debt, thus giving the mortgagor the benefit of his equity of redemption if the goods are worth more, or leaving him liable for the residue if they are worth less than the debt.

It was error to overrule the demurrer to the answer.

The judgment is reversed, with costs.

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