23 N.M. 383 | N.M. | 1917
OPINION OF THE COURT.
This action was brought in the dis-court for Chaves county by the Pecos Valley Lumber Company, the appellant, against George Freidenbloom, the appellee, to recover a money judgment for goods sold and delivered. The complaint was filed on April 15, 1915. No answer or pleading having been filed within the time required by law, a default judgment was rendered against appellee by the court on December 21, 1915. The judgment was for $70.55, with interest at 6 per cent, from November 15, 1915, until paid. Thereafter, execution was issued and delivered to the sheriff, who levied on certain barber supplies, fixtures, etc., belonging to the appellee. A sale thereunder was had, the appellant purchasing said goods. On the day the sale was made to appellant, the latter sold and transferred the said property to J. A. Fountaine. On July 29, 1916, the appellee filed in said cause a motion to set aside the sale made under the execution. The motion alleged that the judgment w.as not secured for labor done or necessaries furnished; that prior to the issuance of the said execution the parties hereto agreed that appellee should pay $7.50 monthly on said indebtedness owing to appellant, but that contrary to that agreement appellant caused the said judgment to be entered herein; that execution was issued on April 8, 1916, but that no demand was made by the sheriff upon the appellee for the payment of said judgment prior to the levy thereunder; that said property was sold at said sale on June 22, 1916, without notice to appellee; that the sheriff’s return of the execution fails to show that six notices or handbills were posted in the precinct wherein the property was sold; that the property levied upon was exempt from execution, but appellee was given no opportunity to exercise his right of exemption in this behalf; that the property levied upon, severed from the building wherein it was located, was not worth more than $500, over and above certain indebtedness chargeable against it; that the property levied upon, considered in connection with the business in which the same was used, was of the value of approximately $1,800; that the advertisement of sale of said property was defective, in that said property was advertised for sale subject to the following liens: First National Bank of Boswell, $77.97, Joyce-Pruitt Company, $237.40, and Boswell Hardware Company, $147.96; that the appellant thereby undertook “to place a lien against the goods and chattels of the defendant without authority of law',” said claims not having been reduced to judgment, agreements having been made between appellee and two of said creditors with reference to the payment of two of said claims; that the return of the sheriff shows that the property was not sold subject to said liens; that the sale price of said property, viz., $99.20 was inequitable, unfair, and unjust to the rights of appellee; and that appellee had no notice that his property would be sold until long after the sale had taken place. Issue was joined on all the material facts alleged in the motion, and, after trial to the court without a jury, judgment was rendered on said motion to the general effect that said sale would be set aside upon the condition that the appellee, within a stated time pay to the appellant the sum of $99.22; otherwise the motion would be denied. The said sum. was paid by appellee, and from the action of the court the appellant has appealed.
The trial court did not set aside the judgment rendered by it in favor of appellant, its action being directed to the sale only; hence we regard as immaterial all questions concerning the right of the appellant to a judgment, notwithstanding an agreement that the cause should be dismissed might have been made by the parties prior to the rendition of the judgment. Whether the action of the trial court was correct or not, therefore, depends upon the pleading and proof of the defective or irregular proceedings taken in pursuance of the execution of the judgment.
Eliminating superfluous matter contained in the motion to set aside the sale, the attacks upon the sale may be said to consist of the following: (1) That the sheriff made no demand for the payment of the judgment, prior to the levy of the execution; (2) that the sheriff’s return fails to show that the notices of sale were properly made; (3) that the sale was made without notice to appellee; (4) the levy and sale were made upon property exempt by law from levy and sale; (5) that notice of sale was irregular in subjecting the property to liens, and the sale irregular in not selling subject to the liens as advertised; and (6) that the price paid at the sale was grossly inadequate.
“It is true, generally, that in sales under execution the duties of the officer executing the writ are directed by statute, and title passes to a purchaser without further confirmation by the court out of which the process issued, but it may be asserted that according to the prevalent practice of the courts in the American states the negative power of setting aside such sales for cause is claimed and exercised.
“In Rorer on Judicial Sales, as the result of a quite full examination of the cases, the rule is stated to be that the court upon whose judgment execution issues has full power to set aside an execution sale whenever the ends of justice and fair dealing require it. * * * The following language of the court, in McLean County Bank v. Flagg, 31 Ill. 290, is noted as a correct statement of the general rule: ‘The power over its own process is possessed by all courts. Such power is a species of equitable jurisdiction that is inherent in courts of law as well as courts of equty. This court has repeatedly held, as between a purchaser and the original parties to the suit, that a court of law will not hesitate to exercise the power of setting a sale aside on account of fraud or irregularity.’ Rorer on Judicial Sales § 108, 1081.
“In Herman on Executions the cases are fully collected in support of the power of the court to set aside sales made on its own process. The writer says: ‘It is the duty of all courts, when satisfied that sales made under their process are affected with fraud, irregularity, or error, willful disregard of the statutory regulations by the officer, whereby the rights of either of the parties interested are seriously affected, to set aside such sale upon a proper showing to the court under whose process the sale was made. * * *’ Herman on Executions, p 406, § 349, and cases.”
The grounds upon which the appellant attacks the judgment or order of tbe trial court are the following: (1) That the price received at the sale for said property was not grossly inadequate; (2) that no demand for payment of the judgment was necessary lirior to the levy of the execution, because the appellee was a nonresident of the county wherein the suit was-brought and the property sold; (3) the sale was not irregular simply because the property may have been exempt from execution, the appellee not having elected to claim his exemption prior to the sale; and (4) that it was not shown, that the rights of appellee were prejudiced on account of the notice of sale to the effect that the sale would be made subject to certain liens.
We have no information as to the ground or grounds upon which the motion to vacate was sustained. We have examined the record with some degree of care and are unable to see any justification for such an order. That the trial court might have conceived that undue advantage was taken of the appellee, in that appellant may have procured a default judgment contrary to its agreement with appellee, may be granted, but that question, as we view the matter, concerns the judgment only, not the question of the abuse of the court’s process.
If the trial court believed the evidence of the appellee, to the effect that Fountaine was his agent at the time of the levy under the execution, it could not have held that the appellee had no notice of the levy or excution, for the failure of Fountaine to inform his principal of the fact would be immaterial to the sheriff or the appellant. If the court did not believe that fact, we still fail to see wherein it could have justified its action in holding the sale invalid upon this ground, if it did as much. Because it is not shown that the rights of appellee in the premises were in any wise prejudiced, the failure to make demand for payment of the judgmnt prior to the levy did not invalidate the sale, nor was it ground to set the same aside. We are convinced that the statute intends that the sheriff shall make the demand for payment of the debt upon the debtor; that his'failure so to do may, under certain circumstances, be sufficient to set aside the sale; that no demand is necessary where the debtor lives without the jurisdiction of the sheriff and no authorized agent of the debtor is known to the sheriff or can be ascertained by reasonable diligence, and that so far as setting the sale aside is concerned the facts must all be considered to determine whether lack of such demand constitutes fraud, unfairness, or an irregularity prejudicial to the interest of the debtor.
Section 2195, Code 1915, provides:
“That no lands, tenements, goods or chattels shall be sold by virtue of any execution * * * unless such sale he at any public vendue * * * nor unless tbe time and place of holding such sale and full description of property to be sold shall have previously been published for four weeks preceding said sale in English or Spanish * * * in the county in which said property is situate,-, or, if there be no newspaper printed in said county, then in the newspaper chosen as the official paper for said county, and also by posting six such notices printed or written * * * in six of the most public places in said county.”
The statute, as ail examination of it reveals, requires the posting of notices only where the publication is made outside of the county wherein such property is situate, the Legislature recognizing that, where the publication is not made in the county wherein the property is situate, some notice be given to those within the county wherein the publication is not made that a sale will take place. The fact, therefore, if it was a fact, that no notices were posted, becomes immaterial.
As we understand the record, at the time the notice of sale was made there were two chattel mortgages outstanding agoinst the property, as well as an attachment lien. The face of the mortgages, as renewed, showed a total amount due of $723.20. The property was under attachment in the hands of the sheriff to secure the payment of $147.96, making-a grand total of $871.16. Appellant’s attorney attempted to ascertain the exact amount due on these several claims, and therefore the notice of sale recited that the property would be sold subject to liens in the total amount of $463.33. The attorney for appellee, in this court, admits that there was due one creditor of the appellee, at the time the notices of sale were given, the sum of $187, and the conclusion to be reached from the evidence is that the attachment of the Boswell Hardware Company against this property for $147.96 was still in existence and superior to the lien of the levy under the execution. The sale therefore was for better than $400, and no witness fixed the value of this property, beyond $500. In fact, the motion alleges that the property was not worth more than that sum. We fail to see how the doctrine that a sale under execution will be set aside where the property is sold for a grossly inadequate sum can apply to the facts of this ease. The facts do not warrant the conclusion that fraud was committed in the premises, nor that unfairness existed detrimental to the rights of the appellee. We are satisfied that the trial court must have concluded that advertising the property to be sold subject to liens which did not exist, made it inequitable to permit the sale to stand. It would appear that the difference between the total amount of alleged liens as advertised in the notice, and as the same existed in fact at the time of sale, was due to payments having been made in the interim between the giving of the notices and the time when the sale took place. We could more intelligently treat of this case had the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law, or rendered an opinion on the case before it. Our view of the case makes it necessary to reverse the judgment of the trial court, with directions to dismiss the motion to set aside the execution sale, and it is so ordered.