16 Colo. App. 48 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1901
This somewhat extraordinory litigation would, but for one or two considerations, present some very difficult and intricate questions. These matters have been argued by counsel, and are treated by them as of vital consequence. It must not be imagined because we refuse to discuss them that we fail to recognize their force or importance, or dispute their -controlling significance under other conditions. Two findings of fact, which the trial court incorporated in its decree, control the decision, and determine the plaintiff’s right, or rather his want of right. Under these circumstances, we must be excused from entering on an argument to demonstrate that the errors assigned are not well taken, or from examining the various questions of law suggested by the respective counsel other than those based upon the matters to which we shall refer. In the winter of 1895 and 1896, Hartsock brought suit against The Gold Gravel Mining Com
These findings of fact, as it seems to us, dispose of the appeal, and end the claims of the appellant with reference to this property. If we concede that his judgment was legal and regular, and that the sale was lawfully made, when once it is admitted, that The John Wright Hardware Company obtained a legal judgment and proceeded to redeem, and then further find that, after it paid the money to the sheriff for the purpose of redemption, the plaintiff’s attorney took it, whereby he was concluded and the redemption completed under the statute, Hartsock undoubtedly thereby lost his right to maintain a bill to compel the sheriff to execute a deed. The receipt of the money by the plaintiff estops him to question the legality of the redemption, orto insist upon a transfer by the sheriff. We do not believe that, though he afterwards paid the money into the clerk’s office for the purpose of preserving his rights, he thereby reacquired the right to the deed. When the hardware company, on a legal judgment, paid the money in to redeem, and the plaintiff’s attorney took it, having the right to take it, the plaintiff was thereby concluded, and he could not subsequently question the regularity of the proceeding, nor, by paying the money into the clerk’s office, could he reinvest himself with the
Whether this be or be not true, we are quite of the opinion that Hartsock, by becoming the successful bidder at the sale, acquired no title to the property which he can enforce against The Gold Garden Mining Company. There is no necessity to discuss the question respecting the force and effect of a judicial sale which is ultimately declared to be void, or of the title which the purchaser obtains when he bids at such a sale. Whatever may be the rule respecting the title which passes to a bona fide purchaser at a judicial sale when the execution runs against the owner of the property and in favor of the plaintiff therein, it will not be seriously insisted that the judgment plaintiff can have his execution levied on the property of a third person, and by becoming the bidder acquire a title as against the true owner. If A has a judgment against B, whereon he issues an execution, and levies it on the property of C, and becomes a bidder at the sale, it can hardly be said that he occupies the position of a bona fide purchaser, or that he can devest the title by judicial sale under the judgment which he holds, and the execution he has issued against B and B’s property. The judgment is against the wrong party, and runs against the wrong party’s property. It is only where the execution runs against the property of the judgment debtor, whose title is attempted to be devested by the process, that the question respecting the rights of a bona fide purchaser can ever arise. As the cases put it, the process is the only authority of the officer to sell, and, where it runs against B and his property, it cannot be executed by levy on, and sale of, C’s land. This matter has been the subject of considerable adjudication, but it is only necessary to refer to one general text book on the subject, — Borer, Jud. Sales, §§879,923, et seq. We therefore conclude that, since the execution on Hartsock’s judgment ran against The Gold Gravel Mining Company and its property, Hartsock could not, nor could the sheriff, levy the writ on property belonging to The Gold Garden Mining Company and by a sale under the writ give to Hartsock a title
Affirmed.