118 Ind. 184 | Ind. | 1889
This was an action brought by the plaintiff against the defendant, in the Superior Court of Vanderburgh county, to quiet title and to obtain the possession of the land described in the complaint.
The defendant answered in two paragraphs, the first being a general denial. The second paragraph, omitting the formal parts, is as follows : “ That on the 18th day of March, 1868, Benoni and Ruth Stinson were the owners of the land .in the complaint described; that on that day the said Benoni Stinson and Ruth Stinson, who was his wife, mortgaged to the State of Indiana the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 35, township 6, range 11 west, forty acres, to secure the payment, at the expiration of five years, of the principal and interest of a certain note executed to the State of Indiana by them, in the sum of $250, which was on that day loaned to said Benoni and Ruth Stinson, and was part of the Congressional Township School Fund of the State of Indiana; that although the whole of said quarter section was so mortgaged, yet, in truth and in fact, on that day the said Stinsons owned only fourteen acres of land in said quarter section,
The appellee also filed a cross-complaint, seeking to quiet his title to said land.
The appellants filed a demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer, but the same was overruled and they excepted.
The appellants filed a reply in two paragraphs, the first of which was a general denial.
The second paragraph is substantially as follows: “ That said tract of fourteen acres, owned as averred in said second paragraph of answer by said Benoni and Ruth Stinson, embraces lots 1, 2, 3 and 4, set out in said answer; that at the time of said partition, after the death of said Benoni and Ruth, and before said auditor’s alleged sale, and before any steps were taken by said auditor to have said sale, said four lots were set off in said partition, and were owned as follows: Said lot number one by-; said lot number two by-; said lot number three by plaintiffs; said lot number four by Martha Stinson, who became such owner as the heir at law of said Ruth and Benoni, and not otherwise; that plaintiffs then were, and ever since have been, residents of the State of Oregon, and not of Indiana; that they had no notice of said pretended notice of sale, or any other proceedings of said auditor, treasurer or any other person, relative to enforcing said mortgage, and they ■ only discovered the same about the date of bringing this suit; that lot one aforesaid
“ ‘ Public Sale.
“ ‘As provided in sections 87, 95 and 96, of chapter one of' the general school law of the State of Indiana, approved March 6th, A. D. 1865, the undersigned will, on the fourth-Monday in March, 1873 (being the 24th day of said month),, at the door of the court-house in the city of Evansville, in Vanderburgh county, State of Indiana, between the hours of' 10 o’clock A. H. and 4 o’clock p. m., offer for sale the following described town lots and lands situate in said county, mortgaged to the State of Indiana to secure loans of common-school and congressional township funds, and upon which the borrowers failed to pay the annual instalments of interest and principal due thereon, to wit: Congressional township-fund loan, No. 483 : The southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section No. thirty-five (35), in township No. six (6) south, of range eleven (11) west, containing forty acres, more or less, in said county. Mortgaged by Benoni Stinson- and Euth Stinson, his wife, on the 18th day of March, 1868. Amount due thereon, $285.29. Should the foregoing sums-, remain unpaid on the 24th day of March, 1873 (being the-fourth Monday of said month), the undersigned, auditor of said county, will, on said day, proceed to sell the premises-mortgaged and described therein, or so much thereof, to the-highest bidder, for cash, as may be necessary to discharge the-amount due for principal, interest, damages and costs, and in-case of no bid for the amount due, the undersigned will bi&« ■ in the same on account of the respective funds.
“ ‘ Philip Decker, A. V. C.
“ ‘ Per Aug. Brauns, Deputy.
“‘Evansville, March 1st, 1873.’
*190 “ That, in his pretended notice of sale set out in the answer, said auditor described the land he proposed to sell as the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section thirty-five (35), in township six (6) south, of range eleven (11) west, in Vanderburgh county, containing forty acres, and by no other description; that there were no improvements on said land ; that, at the time of said alleged sale, said auditor, after having formally offered other parts of said land as alleged in the answer, inquired of by-standers if any one desired to make an offer for any part of said land, whereupon one Lewis C. Stinson, the husband of said Martha, acting as her agent, and for the fraudulent purpose of procuring the sale of plaintiffs’ land greatly below its value, and placing the whole burden of said mortgage upon plaintiffs’ land, every acre of which was then worth $200, and the part claimed by defendant was worth $1,000, then and there, in the name of said Martha, pointed out said particular part of said lot No. 3, claimed by defendant, and at his request said auditor offered the same for sale for the satisfaction of said mortgage, and said Stinson, in the name of said Martha, bid the same in and took a conveyance therefor; and this is all the notice, sale, election to sell and convey described in said answer, and the only sale and conveyance under which the defendant seeks to deprive the plaintiffs of said land, and the alleged ownership of the defendant, and those under whom he claims, as set up in said answer, is wholly based on said pretended auditor’s sale; that the request of the said Stinson to have said property sold as aforesaid, and the bidding of the same in, were in pursuance of a fraudulent conspiracy theretofore entered into by said Lewis C. Stinson and the owners of said lots 1, 2 and 4, in order to relieve said lots, of which they were the owners, to wit, lots 1, 2 and 4, from the burdens of said mortgage, and cast the whole of the same upon the plaintiffs’ property.”
The appellants withdrew the first paragraph of their reply, and the appellee dismissed his cross-complaint and withdrew
The errors assigned in this court are :
1st. That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the appellee to the second paragraph of the reply.
2d. That the court erred in overruling the demurrer of the appellants to the second paragraph of the answer of the appellee.
3d. That the court erred in rendering judgment as set out _ in the record.
Section 4391, R. S. 1881, provides that, before sale of mortgaged premises, the auditor shall advertise the same in some paper printed in the county where the land lies, if any there be, for three weeks successively, and also by notices set up at the court-house door, and in three public places in the township where the land lies.
Section 4392 provides that, at such sale (which shall be at the court-house door), the auditor shall sell so much of the mortgaged premises to the highest bidder, for cash, as will pay the amount due for principal, interest, damages and costs. "When less than the whole tract mortgaged is sold, the quantity sold shall be taken in a square form, as nearly as possible, off the northwesterly corner of said tract; and when less than the whole of any in-lot or out-lot of any town or city shall be sold, the part sold shall be laid out and taken off so that it shall extend from the main or principal street or alley on which said lot fronts, to the rear thereof, to divide the same by a line as nearly parallel with the boundaries of said lot as practicable; and if less than the whole is sold, the auditor, in his notice of sale, shall indicate off of which side or end of said lot the part to be sold shall be taken; and if more than one tract of land is included in the mortgaged premises, the auditor shall elect which tract or tracts
Section 4393 provides that, in case of no bid for the amount due, the auditor shall bid in the same on account of the fund, and as soon thereafter as may be shall sell the same, having first caused it to be appraised by three disinterested freeholders of the neighborhood, etc.
The property here involved is neither an in-lot nor an out-lot in any town or city; the statute, therefore, so far as it applies to that class of property, has no application here. The property sold was not taken out of the northwesterly corner of the tract mortgaged, but, on the contrary, was-taken out of the central and southeasterly part. The question is, does this departure from the statutory requirement invalidate the sale ? This was a sale under a naked power not coupled with an interest, and the auditor was bound to a strict observance of the requirements of the statute regulating such sales. If there was a failure to pursue the statutory authority, there was no valid sale. Benefiel v. Aughe, 93 Ind. 401. The judge who delivered that opinion says this has always been the law in Indiana, and in support of this assertion cites Williamson v. Doe, 7 Blackf. 12, Skelton v. Bliss, 7 Ind. 77, Key v. Ostrander, 29 Ind. 1, Betson v. State, ex rel., 47 Ind. 54; Arnold v. Gaff, 58 Ind. 543, Ferris v. Cravens, 65 Ind. 262, and Brown v. Ogg, 85 Ind. 234.
In such sales it is not a question of good faith, but a question of power. The officer has no power to sell in any other mode than that prescribed by the statute. A departure from the statute is presumed to act injuriously against the owner, as it may deter bidders.
The burden is upon the one claiming title under such a sale to show that the statutory requirements have been strictly pursued. Bonnell v. Ray, 71 Ind. 141; Ward v. Montgomery, 57 Ind. 276 ; Steeple v. Downing, 60 Ind. 478; Smith v. Kyler, 74 Ind. 575.
It was the duty of the auditor to offer the mortgaged prem
It is objected that, considering the shape of the fourteen-acre tract of land, the quantity sold could not have been taken in a square form out of the northwesterly corner. The statute does not require, absolutely, that it should be in a square form; but does require that it shall be as nearly so as possible.
It is further objected that as this was a sale to satisfy a school fund mortgage, the appellants can not quiet their title until they have paid, or offered to pay, the purchaser the amount due on such mortgage. This is, perhaps, true. Shannon v. Hay, 106 Ind. 589.
But there is no averment in the answer that appellants have not tendered the amount due on the mortgage. Did the answer contain such an allegation, it would then present a different question from the one it now presents. The complaint is in the usual form for possession and to quiet title, and the answer confesses the allegations made therein, and seeks to avoid them by showing that the title therein averred has been divested by a sale made on a mortgage to secure the school funds of the State.
As it fails to show a valid sale, it is not sufficient to bar the appellants’ right of action, and, therefore, the court erred in overruling the demurrer intended to test its sufficiency.
As we have reached the conclusion that the answer is bad, it is unnecessary to examine the reply. A bad reply is sufficient for a bad answer.
For the error committed by the'court below in overruling the demurrer of the appellants to the second paragraph of the answer of the appellee, the cause must be reversed.
Cause reversed, with instructions to the court below to sustain the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer of the appellee, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.