26 Wis. 84 | Wis. | 1870
To defeat the plaintiff’s recovery, the answer sets up various matters in the nature of a suit in equity under the old practice, and therefore the merits of that defense must be decided upon equitable grounds. If for any reason it would be unjust and unconscionable to allow the title of the plaintiff to prevail as against the facts stated in the answer and proven on the trial, equity will relieve against it.
It appears that previous to the issuing of. execution on the Hill & Rudd judgment, the plaintiff had acquired the title under the Carney sale. He then issued execution for the full amount of that judgment, with interest and costs, and delivered it to the sheriff to be collected. - The sheriff, in pursuance of the command in the execution, advertised the premises described in the judgment for sale; and, in order to prevent a sale, the
. But the plaintiff insists that nothing like an equitable estoppel can arise in the case, because he has never promised to give up his title to the property, hut on the contrary avowed his intention to hold it before the money was paid. True, he resisted the motion made by the receiver that the Hill & Rudd judgment be satisfied upon the payment of the balance due thereon, less the amount of the Carney judgment and costs of sale, with interest from the date of sale. But this was only declaring, in a most distinct manner, that for some reason he did'not intend to stand by the Carney sale, and that he was willing to give up any title he had acquired under it. At all events, a court of equity will so interpret his conduct in the matter; for his only just ground for resisting that motion and exacting the money due upon the Carney judgment in the Hill & Rudd case, was that the Carney judgment had never been satisfied. A court of justice, in denying the motion to reduce the Hill & Rudd judgment by the amount of the Carney judgment, could not have intended to aid the plaintiff in again collecting a judgment already satisfied by a
The judgment of the Circuit Court must therefore be affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.