60 Ala. 181 | Ala. | 1877
This was areal action under the Code, for the recovery of several parcels of land, titles to which the plaintiffs (the appellees) claimed under a purchase at a sale by the sheriff of Greene county, made under several orders of sale issued from the Circuit Court of that county. These orders were founded on judgments rendered against the defendant (appellants), and directed the sheriff to sell, among other lands, the south-east quarter of the north-east quarter of section eight, township twenty, range two, east. The sheriff, by inadvertence, advertised the north-east (instead of south-east) quarter of section eight, and the misdescription was carried into the deed he executed to the appellees. It was clearly shown, that the land intended to be sold, and which was actually sold, was the south-east, and not the north-east quarter; and the misdescription in the advertisement of the sale, and in the deed, was a mere mistake committed by the sheriff. No evidence was offered that any injury had resulted from the mistake — that purchasers were misled, or that, if correctly described, the land would have sold for a greater sum. The court, on motion of the plaintiffs, permitted the sheriff to correct the deed, by striking out the north-east quarter, and inserting the south-east quarter, " '
The case is thus resolved 'into a single question — the authority of the court to order the correction of the deed, and the effect of such correction: whether, if properly allowed, it has relation to the time of the sale, and will support the present action commenced before it was made. Courts exercise over ministerial officers, whose duty it is to issue or execute their process, a general superintendence and control, not only to prevent the abuse, but to direct and compel the proper execution of such process. — Mobile Cotton Press v. Moore, 9 Port. 679. “ The power of the sheriff, in this State, under fieri facias, to sell land, receive the purchase-money, indorse the sale and receipt of the purchase-money on the fieri facias, and execute a conveyance to the purchaser, is not a mere naked power, but a power coupled with a trust. It is a power which it is the duty of the sheriff to execute made his duty by lato, which has given him an interest extensive enough to enable him to discharge it. It is not given him as a mere power, but as a trust and duty which he ought to fulfill; and his omission to do so, by accident or design, ought not to disappoint the object for which the power in the nature of a trust was conferred by the law.” —Stewart v. Stokes, 33 Ala. 494.
The only difference between the power and duty of a sheriff under a fieri facias, and under an order directing him to sell specific property, is, that in the latter case, his authority is confined to the particular property — he can sell and convey no other. His duty to sell and convey is the same as if lie had levied on it a fieri facias. A sale by him, improperly made, the court, on a proper application, would set aside. From the process of the court, his authority to sell, and to execute the statutory power of conveying, is derived. The purchaser could obtain from the court an order compelling a conveyance, if, on demand, he refused to execute it. No other court than that from which the process issued could compel him to convey. Courts of equity do not, except in peculiar cases, to relieve against fraud or accident, intervene to aid the execution of mere statutory powers, Mistakes
If a sheriff, directed to sell particular property, should, by accident or design, sell other property, the court could not hesitate to vacate the sale, though it may be void. If he should really sell other property, but his conveyance should recite a sale, and shquld convey the property ordered to be sold, it would be the duty of the court to prevent the abuse of its process, by setting aside the sale. Or, if an irregular sale, of prejudice to the parties in interest, is made, the court has powér to vacate it. The power of the court is plenary for the correction of the misfeasance, malfeasance, or nonfeasance of its ministerial officers, in the issue, or in the execution of its process. "Where a sheriff, by mistake, in the conveyance to the purchaser, misdescribes the lands he has sold, he may, under the supervision of the court from which the process issued, make a new deed, describing the lands sold properly.-Ware v. Johnson, 55 Mo. 500; Freeman on Executions, § 332. Such a mistake, in a deed made by an individual, could be corrected by the execution of a new deed, or by any proper instrument in writing, between the parties. The sheriff is the officer of the court, and may be by the court compelled to do that which he ought to do as an individual, if acting individually, and his individual rights were involved. A court of equity alone would have jurisdiction to reform the deed, and conform it to the intention of the parties, if it was not made officially by the sheriff. The court of law, in compelling the correction of such mistakes, does not infringe the jurisdiction of a court of equity. It exercises only its inherent power to superintend the execution of its process, for the protection of its suitors, and of purchasers at sales made by authority of its process. The manner in which the correction is made, must rest largely in the discretion of the court. Ordinarily, the court should order a new deed to be executed, and the former deed surrendered and cancelled, avoiding the registration of two seemingly inconsistent conveyances, and the existence of a conveyance which, it may be, would cast a cloud on the title of the lands the first conveyance improperly purports to pass. But when, as in this case, the conveyance is of several parcels of land, one of which only is misdescribed, we cannot say the court errs, in directing the correction of that error, by striking out the erroneous, and ipserting the correct description, there
What may be tbe operation of tbe new or corrected deed, except as between tbe parties to tbe process, tbe sheriff, and tbe purchaser, is not an inquiry involved in this case ; and we say nothing as to tbe rights of strangers, or purchasers, not having notice of tbe mistake.
The new or corrected deed stands in tbe place of tbe original deed, and takes effect from tbe day of its execution. Its purpose, and its whole operation, is 'to give effect to tbe sale. No new rights are acquired by it — simply, tbe only proper and legal evidence of tbe rights tbe purchaser acquired at tbe sale is given under tbe supervision of tbe court. When a contract is reformed, by decree ; of a court of equity, tbe contract as reformed speaks from tbe day it was made, and not from tbe decree, for tbe decree merely ascertains and declares tbe contract as it was intended when made. Tbe deed, as corrected under tbe order of tbe court, bad relation to its original execution, and from that day passed tbe right to enter on tbe premises. — Thornton v. Miskimmon, 48 Mo. 219.
We find no error in tbe rulings of tbe Circuit Court, and its judgment must be affirmed.