80 Ky. 305 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a motion under section 9 of article 12, chapter 38, General Statutes, to recover the possession by the purchaser of real property sold under an execution. On the hearing of the motion, the apppellant Mooar urged various objections to the motion.
The execution issued on the 29th of May, 1878, and when ■placed in the hands of the officer, the defendant in the execution surrendered the real estate sold for the purpose of satisfying the debt.
It was urged below, and is argued as a ground for reversal here, that the execution issued before the bond was due, and the sale is therefore void.
This court, in the case of Bettis v. Bailey, -2 Bush, adjudged that a sale under an execution, issued at the instance of the plaintiff upon a replevin bond before its maturity, conferred no authority on the sheriff to sell. the property of the defendant, and the plaintiff being the purchaser, acquired no title to the property purchased.
The General Statutes provide that a month shall be constmed to mean a calendar month. (Sec. 7, chap. 21.) The condition of the bond is, that three months after the date hereof, the defendant will pay, &c. It is insisted that, under such a bond, the computation of time is not from the act of signing, but is from the day following its execution, that is, as the money is to be paid three months after the 28th of February, that day is necessarily excluded. The rule is well settled that where the computation is to be made from the act done, then the day in which it is done must be included, but if to be made after or from the day itself, the day must be éxcluded. (Stockton v. Johnson, 6 B. M.;
Section 2 of article 8, General Statutes, provides that ■"any execution on a.judgment which could be replevied before such execution issued may be replevied for three months • at any time before a sale of the property under the same,” &c.
The form of the bond is also found in the same section, and the entire section must be considered in determining the legal effect of the bond by which the plaintiff in the execution is prevented from proceeding to levy or sell under it. The defendant has the right to replevy the judgment for .three months, and when the replevin bond is executed and delivered to the sheriff, the virtue of the execution is gone, and that writ must be returned. So, on the 28th of February, the day on which the bond in this case was executed (the act done), the plaintiff could no' longer proceed with his execution, and from that time to the 28th of May following, and including the latter day, the replevy continued; ■but on the 29th of May, the three months having expired, the execution on the bond bec'ame due, and was properly ¡issued. If the construction contended for by the appellant is adopted, the plaintiff would hot be entitled to his execution until the 1st day of June, that is, excluding the 28th •of February, the time would begin to run from the 1st of • March and end on the 31st of May. The computation of time should begin with the execution of the bond and end in ninety days, unless the .bond Is dated on the 1st day of ■the month. ,
The ninety days in this case, including the 28 th of Feb■ruary, the day the bond was executed, would expire on the :28th of May, and on the 29th the execution was due, and
By section 9'of article 12, chapter 38, General Statutes,, it is provided, in substance, that the purchaser of lands sold under execution shall have the right, after obtaining a conveyance therefor, upon ten days’ notice, in writing, to the-defendant whose land has been sold, to a judgment for possession, if, upon the hearing, the court shall be of the opinion-that he is entitled to the possession, &c. The proceedings on said motion shall be the same as under chapter 6, title 10, of the Civil Code of Practice. The appellant insists that he was entitled to a jury to try the question of appellee’s right to the possession.
This was intended to be a summary proceeding, the plaintiff having obtained his judgment and levied his execution! on the land of the appellee, all of which is not controverted,, we see no reason why possession should not be delivered,, as the questions as to the right of possession and the regularity of the proceeding are purely questions of law.
An objection is also raised as to the sufficiency of the-notice upon which the motion for possession was based. In the notice is set forth a complete and definite statement of the steps taken in order to obtain the execution; the court-in which the action was brought; that it had jurisdiction; the parties defendants to the action and the rendition of the judgment; the execution, levy, and sale under it; the property sold and its description, and the conveyance from the -sheriff! All these facts are specifically alleged, and if true,.
Really, upon the face of the record it does not appear, ■except by the statement in the notice, that Brown and Pear•son have any interest in the controversy. They have asserted no interest whatever, or any right to the property or the possession as against the appellee, and therefore the judgment should be affirmed.