178 Ga. 429 | Ga. | 1934
(After stating the facts.) In its last analysis, the question before us is whether the superior court, in the circumstances of this case and for the reasons stated, had the power to divest Mrs. Kurfees of her property right in her judgment, and destroy the priority of the lien of the execution issued and recorded in her favor by virtue of that judgment. There is no evidence that Mrs. Kurfees took any steps in furtherance of the sale, or that by
It is conceded that the only reason why the purchaser asks that the sale, which the court had confirmed at its instance, should be set aside is because it bought in ignorance of the fact that the lien of Mrs. Kurfees’ judgment had not been extinguished. In other words, the purchaser found out (when it already had constructive notice of the fact that Mrs. Kurfees’ judgment was alive) that it would have to pay five or six thousand dollars more for the property than it supposed it would at the time it made its bid. This, it alleged, was due to misrepresentations or mistakes on the part of the court’s receiver. In these circumstances (and if the court had power to set aside the order of confirmation), it may be that the court might have Teduced the amount of the purchaser’s bid by deducting the amount of Mrs. Kurfees’ fi. fa., in the exercise of some broad power with which a court of chancery is clothed. But the court would have had no power to set aside the order confirming the sale to the purchaser, for the express purpose, as is plainly disclosed by the petition, of affecting the status of Mrs. Kurfees’ judgment resulting from the sale, if not indeed of obliterating and destroying the value of the judgment altogether.
That the receiver’s sale did not divest or affect the lien of the judgment of Mrs. Kurfees, who was a stranger to the proceedings under which the receiver was appointed and the sale was ordered, is well settled. “A receiver’s sale is subject to liens of those who are not parties to the receivership proceeding. A lienholder has a right of which he can not be deprived without an opportunity for a day
Since to set aside the receiver’s sale in the case at bar would affect prejudicially the rights of Mrs. Kurfees, a third party (the negligence of the purchaser having caused her judgment to become the first lien against the property), the decision of this court in Southern Cotton Mills v. Ragan, 138 Ga. 504 (75 S. E. 614), is controlling in this case. In the Ragan case this court laid down two essential elements which must affirmatively appear before a court of equity will be authorized to relieve a purchaser from his bid because of mistake of fact: the exercise of ordinary diligence in discovering the truth, and the fact that the relief will not prejudicially affect the rights of any one. As we have endeavored to show, the confirmation of the sale made Mrs. Kurfees’ judgment the first lien on the property. If the sale, lawfully conducted as it was under order of the court, could be set aside, the lien of Mrs. Kurfees’ judgment would be inferior to the prior lien of the reinstated security deeds after they were resurrected by the decree. There is no force in the argument that Mrs. Kurfees had no rights which were affected by the granting of the prayer to set aside the sale, for the reason that before the sale her judgment was inferior to the liens of the first and second deeds, and that her judgment would occupy the same position relatively to the deeds, if the sale were set aside, that it occupied before. This for the reason that the sale and its confirmation gave to her judgment against Thrower a new status, and she has the right to the enhancement of the value of her property right which the grant of the relief prayed for would destroy. Obviously it is no answer to this proposition to say that she paid nothing to secure these rights, but acquired them merely by operation of law. A right obtained by operation of law is just as sacred, and entitled to as much protection, as any other right. It is not for the court, in the circumstances of this case, to inquire how a party acquired the right he asserts, but merely to determine whether the right in fact existed. So far as the rights of Mrs. Kurfees are involved, the court could only properly deal with them as they existed at the time this petition was presented, not as her rights might have been if the sale had never occurred. A court of equity will not take from a party a vested legal right merely because it
Judgment reversed.