103 Ala. 429 | Ala. | 1893
We will dispose of this case upon the assumption that the circuit court may have properly entertained a motion to set aside a sheriff’s sale of personal property, as the parties have not raised that question.
This appeal is from the order of the circuit court granting amotion to set aside a sheriff’s sale of a stock of goods under execution in favor of O’Bryan Bros, against J. M. Davis; the plaintiffs in the action being the purchasers. The grounds of the motion, as set forth in the writing filed, are, (1) that the sale was “illegal and oppressive and caused the said goods to be sold for about one-third of their real yalue ;” (2), “that said sale was not made at public outcry as required by law;” (3), “that the sheriff, contrary to law, right and justice, sold said goods at private sale to the plaintiffs in execution, and at a price greatly disproportionate to their real value;” (4), “that the plaintiffs directed and controlled the sheriff in making said sale in an illegal and oppressive way so asto wrong and oppress the defendant.” We must confine our considerations to these grounds. We remark that the first, second and fourth grounds are defectively stated, in that the first fails to show wherein consisted the illegality and oppression in the manner of conducting the sale which caused the goods to be sold for less man their value. So, also, the fourth'f ails, .to show what illegality and oppression were practiced, • or'
We inquire whether a court may properly entertain a motion to set aside a sheriff’s sale of personal property under execution, unless under such peculiar circumstances that the property can be restored and the parties placed in stata quo "! Should not the defendant in execution, if injured by llie fraud or oppression of the sheriff, be left to his remedy against the officer?
Reversed and rendered.