76 P. 976 | Cal. | 1904
Action to quiet title.
Plaintiff's title is derived as follows: In 1892 the defendants D.E. Allison, B.R. Sackett, and James Barron were the owners of the land described in the complaint, and executed a mortgage thereon to Charles and Benjamin Golinsky. In 1893 the Golinskys brought an action for the foreclosure of this mortgage, in which they obtained judgment January 5, 1895, directing a sale of the lands in satisfaction of the mortgage debt. Under this judgment the land was sold August 24, 1895, to the plaintiffs in the action, and on March 3, 1896, they received a deed therefor from the officer who made the sale, and on March 24, 1896, they conveyed the land to the plaintiff herein. September 18, 1895, the defendants in the action appealed from the judgment, without giving any bond staying its execution, and on October 7, 1896, the judgment was reversed by this court. (Golinsky v. Allison,
The question presented by the appeal is whether the title taken by the plaintiff under the conveyance from the Golinskys was defeated by a reversal of the judgment under which their title was derived. It is contended by the appellant that at the time of the sale under the judgment the Golinskys took only a defeasible title to the land purchased by them, and that the effect of the reversal of the judgment was to set aside and vacate the sale; and that as they could not transfer to the plaintiff any greater interest than they themselves had, the title taken by him under the deed from them was also defeated. The respondent, on the other hand, contends that where the plaintiff purchases the defendant's property at a sale had under his own judgment, and while the judgment is unreversed conveys it to a third person, the title of his grantee will not be affected by a subsequent reversal of the judgment; and in support of this proposition he relies upon section 957 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and has also cited several cases from other jurisdictions.
The rule is unquestioned that if a stranger to the action purchases the defendant's property at the execution sale, his title thereto will not be affected by a subsequent reversal of the judgment (Freeman on Executions, sec. 347); the chief ground therefor being that given in Manning's case, 8 Co. 96, that otherwise he would lose both his money and the land, and there would be no inducement to purchase at judicial sales. If the purchase is made by the plaintiff in the action, under the great weight of authority, his title will be defeated by a subsequent reversal of the judgment. This rule was adopted in this state inReynolds v. Harris,
Many of the cases cited by the respondent did not involve the rights of the purchaser at a "sale under a judgment" which was afterwards reversed, but the purchase was made where the judgment had been a direct adjudication of the plaintiff's title to the land. And in the greater number of the cases cited by him the purchase from the plaintiff was made before any step had been taken by the defendant for a reversal of the judgment, and the purchaser was protected in his purchase upon the ground that it was made on the faith of a judicial declaration that the title was in his vendor; that a defendant who permits a final judgment against him to remain of record without questioning its validity can invoke no equity in his favor for disputing the title of one *111
who has purchased his property in reliance upon the correctness of that judgment. (See Hunt v. Loucks,
Horner v. Zimmerman,
None of the foregoing cases, however, or the principles governing them, have any application to a case where the defendant has appealed from the judgment before the sheriff's deed is executed to the plaintiff, or a sale made by him to a third person. By such appeal the effect of the judgment as evidence of the matters determined by it is suspended, even though its execution is not stayed. (Woodbury v. Bowman,
As against the authorities cited by the respondent, the appellant has cited Marks v. Cowles,
The suggestion that this case was thus decided for the reason that there is no statute in Alabama declaring the rights of the parties or prescribing the procedure to be followed in case of a reversal of the judgment does not impair its weight as an authority. The rights of the defendant whose property has been taken upon a judgment which is subsequently reversed do not depend upon the provision of section 957 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section is not restrictive of his rights, but is a remedial statute, and is to be liberally construed. The appellate court could have jurisdiction over only the parties before it, and would have no authority to restore to the defendant property over which the plaintiff had ceased to have any control. In Reynolds v. Harris,
Section
Neither is the plaintiff herein in a position to invoke any protection under the provisions of section 957 of the Code of Civil Procedure. By the terms of that section, as amended in 1874, the court is authorized to make restitution "so far as such restitution is consistent with protection of a purchaser . . . at a sale ordered by the judgment, or had under process issued upon the judgment." The plainiff herein did not purchase the property "at a sale ordered by the judgment," *115 and the principles under which protection is given to strangers who purchase at judicial sales have no application. He did not purchase the property until after the sale had been completed by the execution of the sheriff's deed, and until after an appeal had been taken from the judgment, and he had become chargeable with notice of the defects in Golinsky's title. He is therefore not in a position to invoke any equity in his favor, or to claim any protection from the restitution which Golinsky would have been required to make.
As the effect of the reversal of the judgment was to set aside the sale to the Golinskys, the appellant herein was thereby restored to his original estate in the land. He did not require any order of restitution from the court to enable him to assert his right to this estate, and it was incumbent upon the plaintiff herein, before he could have his title quieted, to establish a title in himself superior to that of the appellant. (See Black v.Vermont Marble Co.,
Whether the appellant is estopped from objecting to the validity of the sale to the respondent cannot be determined upon this appeal. The record does not disclose any issue upon that proposition before the superior court (Newhall v. Hatch,
The objection that the statement on motion for a new trial does not sufficiently specify the particulars in which the evidence is insufficient to justify the decision is overruled. It is stated therein, "The foregoing constitutes substantially all the evidence given upon the trial." (See Standard Quicksilver Co. v.Habishaw,
We advise that the judgment and order denying a new trial be reversed.
Gray, C., and Chipman, C., concurred. *116
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.
McFarland, J., Henshaw, J., Lorigan, J.
Hearing in Bank denied.