The petition of the state superintendent of hanks to the Supreme Court, praying for approval of the contract of sale to the appellant of the premises in *14 question was made under the provisions of section 19 of the Banking- Law (Consolidated Laws, ch. 2). That section invests the superintendent with power to take possession of a banking’ corporation under specified conditions, and it provides that, with the approval of the Supreme Court, he may sell and dispose of the real and personal property of a corporation so taken over upon such terms as the court may direct. Upon the presentation of the petition herein, setting forth the circumstances which rendered a sale necessary, the Supreme Court at Special Term duly made an order approving and confirming the sale upon the terms and conditions agreed upon between the superintendent of banks and the appellant, to wit, the payment by the appellant of the sum of $9,000 and certain taxes. The proceedings were entirely regular, and no fact or circumstance material to the transaction or desirable for the information of the court had either been misrepresented or withheld. On the following day the court, of its own motion, and without notice to the appellant, made a second order purporting to modify its first order, by directing that the provisions authorizing a private sale should he revoked, and that another sale should be had at public auction, at a price of not less than $10,000. The question is whether, in these circumstances, it was competent for the court to make this second order.
It is to he observed that while the second order is in form a modification of the first, it is in fact a revocation thereof. The record discloses that the second order is supported by no new facts, by no suggestion of imposition, fraud or undue advantage, and by nothing, in short; except the recital therein that the court had become satisfied that the property would bring a greater price than $9,000. We do not think that the court at Special Term had the power in these • circumstances to revoke its first order and make a new one.
It is, of course,. a well-settled rule that the Supreme
*15
Court has the general power to set aside judicial sales, and it may be exercised as well after confirmation as before.
(Crane
v.
Stiger,
The reason for it is quite apparent. If judicial sales can be set aside merely because some one is willing to bid more than is realized at a fair sale, there will be no.stability of titles acquired at such sales. Such a rule would defeat its purpose by discouraging purchasers at judicial sales, for few men would care to take the risk of having their honest bargains set aside for no better reason than that some other man is ready the next day to make a higher bid. If that can be done once, why can it not be done a dozen times ? And, if it can be done the day after a judicial sale, why can it not be done a year later ? In the case at bar the court at Special Term was obviously doing what it regarded as best for the bank and its creditors; but we think that when the first order had been made under circumstances *17 which justified no further exercise of judicial discretion, its power in the premises had been spent.
The orders appealed from should be reversed and the original order of confirmation should be reinstated, with costs to the appellant in all courts.
Cullen, Ch. J., Gray, Haight, Vann, Willard Bartlett and Hiscock, JJ., concur.
Orders reversed, etc.
