63 N.J. Eq. 500 | New York Court of Chancery | 1902
The bill demurred to discloses the following facts: The defendant Sharpe purchased lands belonging to the defendant Carroll, at a sheriffs sale, made by virtue of an execution issued out of the supreme court, upon a judgment docketed in the .supreme court, from the Essex county common pleas. The lands were, at the time of the sale, subject to a prior judgment .against Carroll for $174.78 and to taxes and assessments of $331. The price bid and paid by Sharpe at the sheriffs sale ■was $375, and, after receiving the sheriffs deed, Sharpe took ■possession of the premises and received the rents and profits. "While so in possession Sharpe applied to the complainant for a loan of $600, to be secured by a first mortgage on the premises, and the proceeds of which were to be applied primarily to the payment of the prior judgment and liens and the payment of the purchase-money, both Sharpe and the complainant .supposing that the execution salé conveyed a valid title against the judgment debtor. The previous liens and the purchase-money were so paid by complainant out of the money advanced to Sharpe and secured by the mortgage, and the judgment and taxes- were canceled of record, in order to make complainant’s mortgage, which declared that it was, in part, given for pur- • chase-money, the first lien upon the premises. At the time of •the advances by complainant for this purpose and of the payment and cancellation of the mortgage Sharpe was in possession -of the premises, receiving the rents, which entry and possession was, as the bill alleges, permitted by the defendant Carroll, who knew of the advertisement for sale under the execution, and 'had procured one adjournment of the sale from the sheriff, and 'knew of the sale, although he was not present. Subsequently Sharpe conveyed the premises to one Grimshaw, who also took possession and collected the rents for one month, when she was -forcibly dispossessed by Carroll. An action of ejectment brought by Grimshaw against Carroll was decided adversely to Grim-shaw, both in the supreme court and in the court of errors and ¡appeals, upon the ground that the execution and the docketed judgment upon which it was issued were null and void for fail
I conclude, therefore, that, upon the facts stated in the bill, the complainant is entitled to have the amounts paid to discharge liens of the previous valid judgment, taxes and assessment •declared to be a lien in its favor upon the property. As to the money paid upon the purchase at the invalid sheriff’s sale, the •decision in Freichnecht v. Meyer, 12 Stew. Eq. 563, would seem to be conclusive that this cannot be charged upon the lands. This is upon the ground that the owner, by the recovery of his