23 Miss. 434 | Miss. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the court.
In 1842, Barnabas Herrod, by Wesley Drane, his solicitor,
The petition further stated, that the land was worth about $4000 at the sale, but owing to the decree then in force, which gave to Herrod the whole proceeds of the sale till his debt was extinguished, petitioner did not occupy such a position as would ' have justified him in bidding, especially against those who would not be required to pay money. An offer- is made to advance $3000 on Drane’s bid, and a prayer is appended that the sale to Drane be set aside, and a re-sale ordered. Drane, Herrod, Sanders, and the heirs of Sample are made defendants, and subpoenas, &c., regularly issued, &c. The circuit court dismissed the petition; from which order Henderson has appealed.
The counsel for both parties have filed able and elaborate briefs, and as the case presents some questions of importance in relation to the practice of the chancery court, and the jurisdiction of the circuit court in matters of equity, we have endeavored to give it that examination which the arguments of counsel and the importance of the case seem to demand. Upon the facts contained in the record, three questions arise, which we deem it necessary to notice.
I. Can a court of equity in this state, after confirmation of a sale made by a commissioner, set that sale aside at a subsequent term ? If so, for what causes, and in what way
II. If a court having general equity jurisdiction possesses this power, can a circuit court exercise it in cases where the property exceeds the value of five hundred dollars ? If it can exercise such a power at all, can it be dpne where other parties than those to the original suit or the purchaser at the sale are interested in the premises ?
III. If such a power exists in the circuit court, do the facts presented by this record make a case proper for its exercise ?
1. Sales by a commissioner under decrees of the chancery court, should be regulated very much by the same rules which apply to execution sales at law by a sheriff. The object in each instance is the same, namely, the execution of the judgment or decree of the court, and the interests of suitors as well as public policy demand that the sales should be in each instance alike certain and obligatory, and that the title which a purchaser obtains in either mode, should possess a similar degree of validity and force. It is true this court has held, that until a commissioner’s sale has been confirmed, it is not valid; yet it has also decided, that the parties to the sale may act in such a manner as to give to the sale the effect and validity of an order of confirmation by the court. 3 S. & M. 493 ; 4 lb. 210.
The chancellor, in refusing to confirm a sale, should exercise not an arbitrary, but a sound legal discretion. What would be sufficient grounds for a refusal to confirm, must depend in a great degree upon the circumstances of each case. Among causes which have been enumerated as sufficient for that purpose, are fraud, accident, mistake, or surprise in relation to the sale or the time of sale, or the title of the property sold, or the failure on the part of a purchaser to comply with the conditions of the sale, in relation to the security or otherwise. But, of course, we do not pretend to specify all the causes which would justify the chancellor in withholding confirmation. In England, it was the practice of the court of chancery to withhold a confirmation for inadequacy of price, or because a better price was offered afterwards than the. bid at the sale. This
The order of the court confirming the sale, is a judgment of the court, by which the rights of the purchaser to the property has been fixed and determined by the appropriate tribunal; and equity and sound policy alike dictate, that this judgment should be eqpally valid, and possess the same force and effect of other decrees or judgments by which the rights of parties are determined. Prior to the confirmation, the whole subject-matter is in fieri, and under the control of the court, subject to the exercise of a sound discretion' in regard to it. Each party has the right to move for or resist a confirmation. When the motion to confirm has been made, a day is assigned, within which a party objecting to a confirmation could attend and show cause against it; if he does not do so, and he sustains any injury therefrom, it is an injury which his own laches has produced, and against which sound policy requires that a court should not relieve him. This is no new doctrine in this court; on the contrary, the principle will be found to pervade the whole body of the jurisprudence of this state, that where a party has an opportunity of presenting his case properly before the appropriate tribunal for relief, it is too late, after the question has been adjudicated against him, to ask that the judgment against him be set aside for any causes which existed at the time, and which were known to him, or which by reasonable diligence he might have ascertained.
But cases may arise, where a party did not know at the time of the confirmation, or was prevented by accidental or other good cause, from exhibiting, if he did know, the causes for which a confirmation of the sale should have been refused, and the sale set aside. In such a case, he should not be, and is not deprived of relief. The same principles, which authorize a court of equity to relieve against iniquitious and unconscientious judgments, would apply as well in this case as to relief against a judgment at law, and the same causes which would justify relief in the latter case would entitle him to relief in the former. Whether this application should be made by petition or in a more formal way by bill, depends somewhat on the situation of the case, and the parties to it. Chancellor Kent, in the case of Codwise v. Gelston, 10 Johns. R. 507, says, that “ The precise line between cases in which a party may be relieved upon petition, and in which he must apply more formally by bill, is difficult to advise. Petitions are generally for things which are matters of course, or upon some collateral matter, which has reference to a suit in court. The mode of application depends very much upon the discretion of the court.” In Ex parte Bloomfield, 1 Ves. jr. 453, the chancellor said, that the case must be put in the shape of a bill, because of its magnitude and importance. In the case in 10 Johns. 507, before referred to, Gelston was a party in the suit, and filed a petition to enforce a lien on a fund in the court arising in that suit, and Chancellor Kent said, “ He was not a novus hospes. He had already been before the court, and his case was well known,” &c. Applying the principles which may be deduced from these cases, we believe the correct practice in cases of this kind to be: 1st. To apply by
2. This brings us to the second proposition, that is, the jurisdiction of the circuit court in questions of this kind. The equity jurisdiction of that court is limited by the constitution to “ all cases where the value of the thing or amount in controversy does not exceed $500 ; also in all cases of divorce and for the foreclosure of mortgages.” This court heretofore held, in the case of Tooley v. Gridley, 3 S. & M. 493, that “ A circuit court having jurisdiction to decree the foreclosure of mortgages, must have power to watch over the execution of its decrees, and to regulate all proceedings under them until the case is finally disposed of.” This view of the law meets with our approbation, yet we think it is very far from establishing the rule, that it has the power añer a sale has been made and confirmed under a decree of foreclosure, at a subsequeut term, to set that sale aside. Of course, until a confirmation, it has full power to regulate the whole matter, to confirm or set it aside according to its discretion, and this as a consequence of the rule that no sale is valid till confirmation. But after confirmation and the expiration of the term, then, as before stated, the order of confirmation becomes a judgment or decree of the court in the subject-matter, and the rights of the parties have become fixed and settled by adjudication. To set aside an order so made is not necessary to the decision of the original suit for foreclosure, or to enable the court to execute its decree in that case, or proceed to a final disposition of that cause if undetermined. On the contrary, the act of sale and confirmation by the court constituted an execution of the decree. The order of confirmation being a judgment of the court, and the
Of course, then, if the. equity jurisdiction of the circuit court is limited to cases where the amount in controversy is $500, it cannot exercise the jurisdiction of a court of equity to vacate an order, judgment, or decree, in relation to property of greater value.
3. The settlement of the foregoing positions makes it unnecessary for us to examine at great length the third ppint presented by the record.
The appellant contends that the sale should be set aside, because this court reversed the decree of the circuit court in relation to the proceeds of the sale under the mortgage.' It is not pretended, that this sale was irregular; that appellant
Let the decree be affirmed.