13 Ala. 289 | Ala. | 1848
In Mobile Cotton Press Co. v. Moore and McGehee, 9 Porter’s Rep. 692, this court determined, that a party injured by the improper execution of a fieri facias, may obtain redress on a motion to the court from which the process issued. 2. That a sale of real estate will be set aside, when the sheriff is guilty of a mistake, irregularity or fraud, to the prejudice of either party or a third person, and that the misrepresentation, or fraud of a purchaser furnishes ground for invalidating the sale.
The particular time within which the party injured may invoke the action of the court to set aside a sale, has not been very definitely settled by the previous adjudications of this
The land was sold on the 5th day of October, 1840; the motion to set aside the sale, was made on the 14th day of October, 1844, more than four years from the date of the sale. The plaintiff was fully advised of the intention of the purchasers to assert their claim to the land, by their instituting suit against him for its recovery on the 22d of April, 1841. Having litigated with them their right to a recovery in that action some three years and six months, at a considerable cost, as we must suppose, to the parties, he sets on foot the present motion, which, if it could be sustained, would promptly have terminated the whole controversy. We are not prepared to say, that under the influence of the former decisions of this court above referred to, when applied to the facts, as we shall presently notice them, the judgment of the circuit court should for this cause be affirmed, but we feel constrained to add, before dismissing this branch of the case, that the law does not regard such delay with indulgence, and that the inference of acquiescence on the part of the plaintiffs in any supposed irregularities or fraud in the sale, may well
We will next examine the case, upon its merits, as presented by the affidavits and documentary proof. It appears from the proof that the land in controversy was sold by one Poe, the sheriff of Fayette county, on the 5th October, 1840, under three several executions upon judgments rendered in the circuit court of Fayette county, one in favor of James A. McLester, assignee, &c. for the sum of $50 82; another in favor of T. & R. Simonton, use of James A. McLester, for the sum of $73 29, and the third in favor of James Hogan, administrator of Reuben Jones, for the sum of $3,655 66, which last named judgment was rendered against the said plaintiff in error and Samuel Caple, one of the defendants in this cause. To this judgment was superadded the sum of $365 05¿, as damages upon its affirmance in this court, and the ji. fa. was issued against McCollum, the principal, Caple, his surety in the original judgment, and Newman and Joseph McCollum, the sureties on the writ of error bond. The executions upon these judgments were placed in the hands of the defendant Hubbert; the two first named, on the 21st May, 1840; the Hogan execution, on the 20th July, 1840, the judgment having been affirmed in June, 1840. Hubbert being then the sheriff of Fayette county, levied them on the land in controversy. It further appears, that on the first Monday in August, 1840, Poe was elected sheriff, and gave bond and entered upon the duties of said office, on the 10th day of August, 1840. That the lands not having been disposed of, the ji. fas. were placed in the hands of Poe on the 28th August, 1840, either by the clerk of the court, or by his predecessor, Hubbert, who thereupon struck out the name of Hubbert, inserting his own name in the levies, and dating them to correspond with the time of the reception by him of the ji. fas.
It is proper at this point to consider an objection raised by the counsel for the plaintiff in error. It is insisted, that after the executions had been levied by one sheriff, they could not be transferred by him to his successor, and the case of Bondurant v. Buford, 1 Ala. Rep. 360, is relied upon to sustain this position. In that case, the outgoing sheriff, with
Was there fraud in the sale, is the next inquiry. We have examined the various affidavits submitted by the parties respectively, and although the case upon this point is not entirely free from circumstances of suspicion, we think there is no proof which would warrant the court in setting aside the sale. The plaintiff in error was present at the sale, consenting to it, and had made, as he himself states, an arrangement with one Atkins to purchase it in for him, at a nominal sum, and then to convey the title to his father, thus putting it beyond the reach of his creditors. This fact being communicated by Abernathy to Caple, who was the surety of the said McCollum, he, as he swears, purchased the land for his indemnity, but after the sale, agreed to permit said plaintiff to redeem by paying the amount of the execution before the return day, and refunding the money bid at the sale, which was $510. After the purchase, Caple agreed that the deed might be made to himself and Hubbert, and by subsequent agreement, it was consented that Poe, the sheriff, should