No. 139. | Tex. App. | Apr 20, 1893

Appellee recovered a judgment in the District Court of Galveston County against S.H. Morrison for a sum of money and foreclosure of a lien on a tract of land, situated in San Jacinto County, given by Morrison to secure the debt. An order of sale was issued to San Jacinto County, directing the sheriff to sell the land. A sale followed, at which appellant bought the land for $12.80. The order of sale was returned, and appellee instituted this proceeding, which was a motion, filed in the original cause of Blum v. Morrison, to set aside the sale on the ground of gross inadequacy of price, produced by irregularity and by fraud and collusion between the sheriff and Hansbro in the conduct of the sale. Notice of the motion was served on Morrison and Hansbro, both of whom resided in San Jacinto County.

Morrison made no answer, but Hansbro filed a plea denying the jurisdiction of the court over his person, and claiming the privilege to be sued in the county of his residence. He also excepted to the motion upon the same ground; and subject to these pleas, he demurred and answered to the merits. The plea of privilege and exceptions to the motion were overruled. A trial was had, and verdict and judgment were rendered for appellee, setting aside the sale and ordering a resale of the property.

The ruling of the court upon the plea of privilege and upon the exceptions, so far as they present the same question, may be considered together.

The right of a judgment creditor to apply by motion to the court in which his judgment was obtained to set aside a sale which has, through irregularities in making it, resulted in a sacrifice of the property for an inadequate price, has been recognized by our Supreme Court in many cases. Miller v. Koertge,70 Tex. 162" court="Tex." date_filed="1888-03-06" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/miller-v-koertge-4895649?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="4895649">70 Tex. 162; Owen v. Navasota, 44 Tex. 522 [44 Tex. 522]; Cravens v. Wilson, 48 Tex. 324" court="Tex." date_filed="1877-07-01" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/cravens-v-wilson-4892992?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="4892992">48 Tex. 324 [48 Tex. 324]; Ayres v. Duprey, 27 Tex. 603.

The point was not, perhaps, directly involved in any of these cases, and the expressions in the opinions referred to were dicta, but they were dicta amply supported by authority, and which we are content to follow. Rorer on Jud. Sales. sec. 1081; Freem. on Ex., sec. 310; Voorhis v. Terhune, 13 Atl. Rep., 392.

Courts of equity have always entertained such motions to set aside foreclosure sales made under their process. Bank v. Sprague, 21 N.J. 461, and authorities cited.

The reasons assigned in the cases for the exercise of such a power over a purchaser who is a stranger to the suit in which the sale took place is, that by a purchase under its process he submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court over such process, and became subject to its power to revoke a sale which had been improperly made thereunder.

It was suggested, in argument, that it was the practice in courts of equity to confirm sales made under foreclosure proceedings, and that until this had been done no title passed to the purchaser, and that it was *112 because of this that those courts exercised the power to review the sale and set it aside upon motion. But in the case of Bank v. Sprague, above cited, it is said: "In England, and also in the Court of Chancery that formerly existed in New York, confirmation of sales in chancery was required. But the jurisdiction did not depend on that. Sales were set aside upon application in the suit even after confirmation."

In none of the authorities which we have examined was there any question of venue involved or alluded to. They go merely to the establishment of the remedy and the principle upon which it is founded. And that principle, it seems to us, excludes the idea that the power of the court to administer this remedy is dependent upon the residence of the purchaser.

The jurisdiction is simply that which the court obtained over the subject matter and parties in the original action. By the rendition of judgment it was not exhausted, but continued in full force in order to secure to the plaintiff the fruits of his recovery. It required the issuance and proper and lawful execution of process, and involved the power to control the sheriff in the performance of his duty, and to prevent not only him, but all other persons, from abusing the writ. A purchaser under its writ took such title as he thereby obtained, subject to this power in the court to see that the sale was properly and lawfully conducted, and to revoke it if it was not. We think the fact that the sale was made, and that the purchaser resided in another county than that in which the decree was rendered, can not affect this power. To hold that it does would cripple the power of the court to render complete relief to the party who had secured its judgment, and make its decrees dependent on the action of other tribunals for adequate enforcement. For if this proposition were admitted, the merest form of a sale, if made in another county, to a stranger to the suit, lacking all the qualities essential to carry out the substantial objects of the decree, would put an end to the power of the court over its process. The statutes regulating venue have reference to original actions, and not to such auxiliary proceedings as are involved in the exercise of jurisdiction in cases over which it has already vested.

We think the plea and the exceptions asserting a right in appellant to be sued in the county of his residence, and denying the jurisdiction of the District Court of Galveston County, were properly overruled.

The exception to the parts of the motion alleging injury to Morrison by the sale should have been sustained; but as the motion was amply sufficient without those allegations, and as the case was tried on the other issues, we think the error was harmless.

The other exceptions were properly overruled.

The charge of the court submitting to the jury the question as to whether or not the sheriff conducted the sale fairly, and as to the inadequacy of the price paid by appellee, was warranted by evidence. *113

There was evidence from which the jury might properly conclude that the sheriff prevented Woodruff from bidding at the sale, and that he conducted it too hurriedly, and knocked off the land to appellee sooner than was consistent, under the circumstances, with a fair sale. It is the duty of a sheriff in selling property to make it bring as much as can be obtained, and to allow to persons desiring to purchase all reasonable opportunity to bid. It appears in this case that, in all probability, at least one person was prevented from bidding by unnecessary haste in closing the sale.

We conclude that the verdict is sustained by the evidence. The jury were warranted in concluding that the price paid was grossly inadequate, that this inadequacy was produced, in part at least, by failure of the sheriff to afford proper opportunities to others to buy, and that, in a proper legal sense, the sale was not fairly made.

The remarks of appellee's counsel were not probably calculated to have any improper influence. They were based upon evidence in the case, and the strongest complaint that could be urged against them would be that they stated a reason for setting aside the sale, of which appellee could not avail himself — in other words, that they involved an unsound proposition. The court corrected that, and it can not be held that mistaken positions assumed by counsel in argument will of themselves afford ground for new trial.

The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

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