206 Ky. 243 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
. Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Hunley appeals from a judgment of the lower court because he says the appraisers chosen by the master commissioner before making the sale under the judgment, appraised the land at $70.00 per acre, when the evidence heard upon the exceptions to the report show that the land was worth from $80.00 tó $90.00 per acre, and if the appraisement had been fixed at $80.00 per acre, appellant would have had a right of redemption because the price at which the lands were sold was not two-thirds of $80.00 per acre, but was more than two-thirds of the appraised value at $70.00 per acre.
There is no charge of fraud made against the appraisers or the commissioner in carrying out the sale. Quite a number of witnesses testified that the land was worth about $80.00 per acre. There was evidence to the ■contrary.
The evidence of appellant Huniey does not show or tend to show bad faith on the part of the appraisers, or any fraud or mistake in their appraisement.
The court, we think, properly overruled appellant’s exceptions to the report of sale of the commissioner.
Judgment affirmed.