78 N.Y. 387 | NY | 1879
Courts of equity exercise a supervision of sales made under their decrees, which is not in all cases controlled by legal rules, but may be guided by considerations resting in discretion. They may set aside their own judicial sales, upon grounds insufficient to confer upon the objecting party an absolute legal right to a re-sale. They may relieve against mere mistakes, accidents or hardships, or oppressive or unfair conduct of others, though such conduct may not amount to a violation of law; and where fraud is alleged they may order a re-sale upon facts casting such a degree of suspicion upon the fairness of the sale as to render it, in their judgment, expedient, under all the circumstances, to vacate it, though the alleged fraud may not be clearly established. In such cases the rights of third parties are duly regarded, and proper terms imposed; but where only the rights of the parties to the action are involved, very few cases can be supposed in which an order granting a re-sale is reviewable in this court. Such orders are usually discretionary, and although reviewable on appeal from the Special to the General Term, no appeal lies to this court from orders of that nature.
An order refusing a re-sale has been held appealable to this court, where the conceded or established facts constituted a fraud in law, which upon established principles gave to the complaining party a legal right to have the original sale vacated. (Howell v. Mills,
In the present case the original parties are the only contestants. The application for a re-sale was made very promptly and it cannot be said that the condition of things had materially changed. The sale was made August 24, 1878, some of the voluminous motion papers were verified as early as September 4, 1878, and the motion was noticed for September 24, 1878. The facts disclosed by the papers are sufficient to create a strong suspicion, at the least, that a fraudulent contrivance was resorted to by or in the interest of the defendant Heresy, to induce the plaintiffs to bid up the property under the belief that Whittier desired and intended to purchase of them at a price higher than that bid by them, and to induce that belief by an artifice. The referee and the General Term both found that such fraud had actually been committed, and it is not customary for us to review the facts upon which the court below has based the decision of a motion. Even if we should undertake to do so in this case, and should come to the conclusion that the fraud was not so clearly proved as to give the respondents an absolute legal right to set aside the sale, there would still remain sufficient to justify the exercise of the discretionary power of the court in the matter.
The question whether the relief should be a reduction of the bid, or a re-sale, was purely one of discretion, and one upon which we should not feel warranted in interfering with the order of the General Term. No question of law being involved the appeal should be dismissed, with costs.
All concur.
Appeal dismissed. *390