82 Mo. 524 | Mo. | 1884
This was a proceeding at the October term
“ And now comes Robison J. McKee and on his oath ■says that he is the owner of the following described real estate, situate in Clinton couuty, Missouri, to-wit: Lot No. 15, in block No. 39, in the town of Lathrop, in said • county; that he purchased said property of Daniel H. Maret; that on the 17th of June, 1881, judgment was rendered against said property at the suit of John N. Payne, collector of Clinton county, Missouri, in this court, enforcing a lien for certain taxes due thereon; that said Daniel H. Maret was liable for said taxes to affiant on his covenants to affiant, and when the affiant was served with summons in said court he applied to said Maret to pay the same; that ¡said Maret agreed and promised to do so, and as affiant is informed and believes did, by letter, instruct the collector to send the receipts to the Lathrop bank and there receive the amount due, which the collector was in the habit ■of doing, and did do as to the balance of said Maret’s taxes, but by some oversight said tax was not so paid; that affiant supposing said taxes were paid, attended no further to said •suit, and was in ignorance that the same was not paid or that judgment had been rendered therefor until he saw the ■.sheriff’s advertisement for the sale thereof on execution, 'issued upon said judgment, of which affiant immediately notified said Maret, who again promised and agreed to pay the amount of the judgment, and prevent a sale thereof under said execution; that, as the affiant is informed and "believes, said Maret did, on the 11th day of October, 1881, visit the sheriff, and represented the facts to him, and offered to pay the amount of the judgment and all costs so ■as to avoid said sale; that the sheriff, M. S. Allgaier, not .knowing at the time the exact amount thereof, and being at the time busily engaged with the duties of his office, assured said Maret that it would be all right, and that he would not sell said property, but would return said execu*527 tion satisfied, and settle with, said Maret, who was and is a responsible man, at another and leisure time. Affiant further states that said Maret is a trustworthy and responsible man, and he relied upon his paying said judgment and supposed it was settled until Monday morning, the 17th inst., when he was informed that the property had been sold under said execution. Affiant states, by a mistake and •oversight of the sheriff, he sold said property, not meaning nor intending so to do; that at such sale the same was stricken •off to the said H. A. Logan and A. J. Orem; that if he had known the property would be sold he would have satisfied such judgment, and is now ready and willing to pay the same, and for that purpose has deposited in the hands of the sheriff'the full amount of said judgment and all costs, to be so applied if said sale is set aside.
“ Wherefore he prays the court to set aside said sale and order and direct the sheriff'to return to said purchasers their money bid and paid at said sale for said property.
“ R. J. McKee.
“ Subscribed and sworn to before me this October 19th, 1881.
D. H. Lindsay, Clerk.”
The following is the order of court setting aside sale :
“Now, at this day, come the parties herein, by their respective attorneys, and the motion to set aside sheriff”s sale heretofore filed is taken up, considered by the court, and is by the court sustained and the sale is set aside, and the sheriff'is ordered to pay back the purchase money to the purchaser; and it is ordered and adj udged by the co urt that the defendants pay all costs in this behalf expended, .and that execution issue therefor.”
The evidence tended to prove the averments of the motion. And the defendants appeal to this court. •
I. The appellants insist that the circuit court erred in setting aside the sale, first: Because under the evidence and motion no sufficient grounds for such action were •shown to the court; and secondly, because the plaintiff in the execution and the sheriff who made the sale were not
This court has repeatedly held that it is the duty of courts to see that their process is not abused or perverted to the oppression of individuals ; and if it appear at the return day that process has been executed in an illegal or oppressive way, summary redress will be afforded. Ray v. Stobbs, 28 Mo. 36. Courts exercise the power to vacate sales upon motion at the return day for many causes. “ There is scarcely any fraud or irregularity either in the issuing, form or execution of a writ, which may not be made the occasion for a motion to vacate a sale.” Freeman on Ex., § 308. A sale may be vacated on account of the misconduct of the officer, or of the plaintiff, or of the defendant, or of the purchaser. And for accident, or mistake, or inadvertence, when shown to have operated injuriously upon the interests qj:' the complainant. § 308, supra; Neiman v. Early, 28 Mo. 475; Cummings’ Appeal, 23 Penn. St. 509; Beach v. Dennis, 47 Ala. 262.
II. In Neiman v. Early, 28 Mo. 475, Judge Napton, in delivering the opinion of the court, held that: “ The court-had power over the execution of its process until the officer returned it, and it is not believed to be the practice in such cases, or essential to the exercise of the power of the court that the bidders or purchasers should be notified. * * So long as the term lasts, the matter is in the power of the court to take such steps as under the circumstances may be thought just and prudent.” But in the case at bar no such question arises as to the purchasers, because the record shows them to have appeared and defended and as here seeking a reversal of the judgment.
It remains, therefore, to consider the question of want of notice to the plaintiff in the execution, and to the sheriff or officer who made the sale. The better practice would seem to require notice to all the parties in interest. The plaintiff', the defendant and the purchaser are all interested and their rights-would in no manner be affected by the pro
Let the judgment be affirmed.