Hutchinson v. Cassidy

46 Mo. 431 | Mo. | 1870

Bliss, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

On the 7tb of August, 1866, the County Court of Linn county made an order directing the sheriff to “proceed and advertise and sell the swamp and overflowed lands belonging to Linn county, commencing on the 10th day of September, and continuing said sale from day to day until' all is sold,” etc., etc. The sheriff gave plaintiff a regular certificate of sale under said order, for eighty acres of such land, reciting that be offered the same for sale at public auction at the door of the court-house,1 etc.; that the plaintiff was the highest and best bidder for the same, having bid $160, giving security, etc.

The plaintiff brought bis action for a title, making Cassidy, who subsequently purchased of the county, a party. The court below found that the sale was not made by the sheriff at the time of the public sale, as recited in bis certificate, but three days thereafter, and at private sale, and it thereupon held the sale to have been invalid and not binding on the county. The plaintiff makes various objections to this bolding, and claims, first, that the order of the County Court did not require that the sale should be at public auction. But the statute does require that the sale should be “at public vendue, to the highest bidder,” and the sheriff was imperatively controlled by its requirements (Wagn. Stat. 867, § 3), and it does not matter whether the order of the County Court contained the requirement or not. Second, the plaintiff objected, upon the trial, to any evidence contradicting the recitals of the sheriff’s certificate, and claims that the county and those who bold under it are conclusively bound by them.

Tbe general subject of tbe power of public officers to bind tbe public by their official acts, and tbe necessity, of conforming to tbe law in order to give any validity to their action, has been recently considered at length by this court in The State v. Bank of Missouri, 45 Mo. 528. We do not understand that tbe present plaintiff contests tbe doctrine of that case, or claims that if tbe law requires a sale at public vendue, a private sale would be valid only as made so by a falsehood on tbe part of tbe officer. And he now comes into a court of equity and demands a specific per-*434formalice of a contract by the county, void in itself, and which can only become a contract through such falsehood. - The claim has the merit of boldness, but does not appeal very strongly to the conscience of the court. In all this class of cases the public officer, if he is conscious of violating the law, will almost as a matter of course make correct papers; and if courts could not go behind them, the public would be placed almost entirely at his mercy. His personal responsibility would afford but a slight remedy.

The doctrine of estoppel, insisted upon by plaintiff’s counsel, has no application to the case. A man may be estopped from disputing the recitals of his own deed, but he is not estopped from disputing the unauthorized declarations or acts of his agent. As well might a mere private agent or attorney in fact disregard his authority, and, in order to make his infidelity effectual, recite a known falsehood in a transfer of his principal’s property to a fellow-conspirator; and to make the analogy complete, the purchaser should come into a court of equity and ask the chancellor to enforce the transfer because of this known false recital. In the case at bar, there is no evidence of actual fraud; but we can seldom know whether it exists or not, and our only safety is in holding agents to their authority, and giving effect to no departure from it.

The point made in regard to the equity of Cassidy is of no importance whatever, as it does not matter in the least whether the county subsequently disposed of the property or not.

The judgment is affirmed.

The other judges concur.
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