4 Iowa 482 | Iowa | 1857
To entitle themselves to the relief asked, and to reverse the decree below, complainants rely principally upon two grounds. The first is, that it was the inten-. tion of the grantors, and the parties to said deed, that the trustees should sign and acknowledge the same; that it never was, therefore, properly executed' and delivered, but was received by the trustees, or by Postlewait & Creegan as an escrow ; and that never having accepted the trust, they had no power to make the sale. In the second place, it is insisted that notice of said sale was not given as required by the terms of the deed.
In the statement of the case, and thus far in this opinion, the instrument executed by complainants is spoken of as a deed of trust. Counsel for complainants so treat it, adding, however, the further argument that if a mortgage, and not a deed of trust, then the persons named therein as trustees could not foreclose by sale without the aid of a court; that such sale was extra-judicial, could confer no title, and that at most the purchaser holds the property in trust for them. We deem it entirely unnecessary in deter
The second and only remaining question is, whether the notice given was such as was required by terms of the deed. And we are clearly of the- opinion that it was. It is not denied but that more than thirty days intervened between the first publication of the notice and the day of sale. Nor is it claimed that the notice was- not published regularly in each issue of the paper for five successive times. B.ut it is said that the last issue or publication was on- the 28th day after the first one, and that thirty days’ notice was not, therefore, given as required by- the deed-, or in other words, that while the publication may have been continuous from one
But there is still another view of it presented by counsel for appellants, which has more weight, and that is that thirty days should have intervened between the first and last publication of the notice, and that it is not sufficient that thirty days intervened between the first publication and the day of sale. We say this has more weight than the position last examined, and yét we must say that but for
The publication was made regularly every week, there was no omission. The notice,^.s we have before substantially said, was circulating, and being published to the public and the world in legal contemplation, as much and effectively on each day, hour and minute after one publication, and before the succeeding one, as it was at the instant of time when the paper was issued or delivered to its readers.
Let us state the argument -categorically .thus: Was. the “ advertisement,” spoken of in the deed, in the newspaper on any other days than the days of publication ? This is admitted, and could not well be denied. If so, was it not as. practically in the paper for six days of-each week as.it was on the seventh, or ,the publication day ? That is to say, was the notice any more given to the public on the seventh than on the six days? Bid the parties contemplate the mere, setting up. of the notice, and striking of it off in the paper, or was the circulation .of such paper and reading of it by the .public, the leading purpose and object of the advertisement? -Was not the publication of the fact of sale what was. designed? What do we understand by such publication,.other than.a notification to the people at large by printing and circulating the same in the paper ? And if such publication operated as a notice on the days on which the paper was not published, why did not such notice continue after the last issue of the paper, to the day of sale, such sale having taken place prior to the next publication day? If, every day, subsequent to the first, and prior to the la§t issue, was a day of notice — if up to the sixth of May (the date of.the last issue,) there,was twenty-nine days “pub-
In conclusion, we may say, that the cases of Dulty v. Zeigler, and Temple v. Casstens, 1 G. Greene, 164 and 192, cited by appellants, do not decide any question arising in this case. In Early v. Doe, 16 How. 641, relied upon, the , length of time required by the law, had not elapsed between th.e first publication and the day of sale, but it is nowhere intimated in that case that-such length of time should have ■elapsed between the first and last publication. On the contrary, while the question did not directly arise,.it is almost . assumed- as. true,..that the rule would have been good, if the
Decree affirmed.