21 N.J. Eq. 458 | N.J. | 1869
The complainant in this case applied to the Chancellor to set aside the sale of the real and personal property made by the master. An order was granted on Kirkpatrick, the purchaser, to show cause why the sale should not be set aside. The grounds alleged were, that the master had refused the bids of proper persons at the sale; that he made requirements of some bidders not exacted of others; that he put up for sale and sold in one parcel the entire furniture of a hotel worth $50,000; that he sold it without exhibiting it to purchasers, and when out of their view, and on terms as to removal that prevented any one, except the actual purchaser, from bidding; and that the purchase was made by Kirkpatrick for persons in fact parties to the suit, with different interests, who unlawfully combined to prevent competition, and procured Kirkpatrick to purchase for them. The Chancellor refused the application on the ground as expressed in his opinion, that the objections were not sustained.
The statute provides that “ all persons aggrieved by any order or decree of the Court of Chancery, may appeal from the same or any part thereof.” If this order was unlawfully made, the appellants wore aggrieved by it. They are creditors who had a lien on the property sold. The price oí §135,000, for which the master sold the property, will be insufficient to pay their whole claim, or perhaps any part of it, after satisfying the prior encumbrances. If the sale, as they allege, was unfair and illegal, and the property, if fairly sold, would have brought enough to pay them, they are a proper party to appeal.
But the respondents allege that this is not a proper subject of appeal; that the application was one in the discretion of the Chancellor, and not for relief to which the appellants had any right.
It is settled, and is not in fact disputed, that an appeal
The real question is, whether the order applied for was in the discretion of the Chancellor, or whether it was a matter of right which he was bound to grant upon a proper case shown. What is matter of discretion may, in some cases, be doubtful. In The People v. The Superior Court of New York, 5 Wend. 125, this discretion is correctly defined to-be “ that which is not and cannot be governed by any fixed principles or rules.” And in Rogers v. Hosack’s Ex'rs, 18 Wend. 319, Justice Cowen says, that to warrant an appeal, “ some definite rule of law or equity must appear to have been violated.” This is cited with approbation in the opinion of this court, delivered by the Chief Justice in Garr v. Hill, 1 Halst. Ch. 641.
Courts of equity interfere upon a proper application, to set aside sales made by their officers, when conducted contrary to principles of law, or when, through fraud or mistake, injustice has been done by the sale. They so interfere upon application in the suit in which the sale was made, and even when the purchaser was not a party to the suit. They hold that by becoming a purchaser in the suit, he subjects himself to the jurisdiction of the court, so far as the purchase is-concerned.
In England, and also in the Court of Chancery that formerly existed in New York, confirmation of sales in chancery was required. But the jurisdiction did not depend upon that; sales -were set aside upon application in the suit, even after confirmation.
In Casamajor v. Strode, 1 Sim. Stu. 381, it was held that a stranger to the suit, by becoming a purchaser, submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court. In Watson v. Birch, 2 Ves., jun., 51, the sale was opened after confirmation. And in Morice v. The Bishop of Durham, 11 Ves. 57, and in White v. Wilson, 14 Ves. 151, Lord Eldon
In Collier v. Whipple, 13 Wend. 224, and Tripp v. Cook, 26 Wend. 143, the sales had been confirmed and the deeds delivered, yet the sales were sot aside. In Requa v. Rea, 2 Paige 339, a sale to a stranger was set aside on petition in the suit after the deed was delivered.
In this state, in Seaman v. Riggins, 1 Green's Ch. 214, Chancellor Pennington set asido a sale, as he said he had ím doubt of the power of the court, or its duty, to set it aside. In Howell v. Hester, 3 Green’s Ch. 266, the same Chancellor declared that the case was within the principle of the authorities, and set aside the sale upon petition. In Campbell v. Gardner, 3 Stockt. 423, Chancellor Williamson, upon petition in a foreclosure suit, set aside a sale after the deed had been delivered. In that case the complainant was the purchaser, and the relief was granted on grounds perhaps in the discretion of the court, but in the others it was on the ground of fraud or mistake, or other grounds which gave title to relief in chancery on bill filed. The relief was granted not as a matter of discretion, but as a matter of principle and duty or right.
In this case, some of the grounds on which the application was made would, if sustained, give the appellants a right to have the sale set aside. They would have had that right upon bill, on the ground of an unlawful combination to prevent competition. If it is the settled practice of the Court of Chancery to grant such relief upon petition in the suit in which the sale is made, and the established doctrine there, that it is the duty of the court to grant it in a case within the principles fixed for such relief on bill, then it is clearly no longer a matter of discretion.
That court might once have had a discretion, whether it would permit the relief to be asked on petition, or would require a bill to be filed, but the practice by petition being established, the Chancellor, when he hears and examines into
On principle, then, an appeal should lie from a decision like this, determining the merits of the controversy between the appellants and the purchaser. That controversy is, whether the sale was made contrary to the requirements of law. ■
• And this appeal is sustained by authority as well as principle. It has been expressly decided that an appeal will lie from an order upon application to set aside sales, made by petition or motion in the suit in which the sale was ordered. It was so held in England by the House of Lords, in Bailey v. Maule, reported in a note, in 7 Cl. & Fin. 121, and referred to in O’Neill v. Fitzgerald, in 3 Bligh's Appeals 24. And in New York such appeals were sustained in Collier v. Whipple, 13 Wend. 224, and in Tripp v. Cook, 26 Wend. 143. In the last case, which came-up like the one before us, the appeal was sustained on a motion to dismiss it. In Kingsland v. Bartlett, 28 Barb. 480, an appeal from an •order of the special term refusing to set aside a sale was •dismissed, because the application was not founded on any fraud or irregularity in the proceedings, but on a misapprehension as to the time of sale, and such application was held fo be in the discretion of the court. The court say, there ■can be no right where no legal mistake has been committed by those who have conducted the proceedings. This is in accordance with the principles in the other cases.
The motion to dismiss must be denied.
The whole court concurred.