20 F. Cas. 1079 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana | 1844
OPINION OF
Mr. Smith moved the court to set aside a sale of real estate made on execution in the above case, on the ground that the defendant had no title to the land or interest in it at the time of the sale. Before the judgment Allen, the defendant, conveyed the land to one Coates, taking a mortgage to secure the payment of ihe purchase money, which mortgage Allen had assigned, so that he had no interest in the land either equitable or legal.
Mr. Morrison, who opposed the motion, did not controvert the facts, but insisted that as the deed to Coates was on record, the purchaser was bound to know the state of the title, and having made the purchase with this knowledge he was entitled to no relief. That the maxim of caveat emptor applied with peculiar force to judicial sales. That the court would not, under the circumstances of that case, give relief to the purchaser on a motion, but would, if he were entitled to relief leave him to a suit in chancery.
It is clear that the defendant does not warrant the title of his land sold on execution. And if the sheriff or marshal, who sells, does not warrant it, he may bind himself, but not the defendant, in the execution. The Monte Allegre, 9 Wheat. [22 U. S.] 616; Louden v. Robertson, 5 Blackf. 276.
But the case before us is, whether a purchaser of land under execution, to which the defendant had no title, shall be compelled to complete his purchase. In Muir v. Craig, 3 Blackf. 293, the court gave relief on a bill filed against Craig, the defendant, in execution, whose land, as was supposed, had been sold on execution, but in which he had no interest, on the ground that the money received had been applied to the payment of the defendant’s judgment. The amount paid was decreed to be refunded. It may be doubted whether this did not carry the principle too far. The purchaser must look to what he buys. But in the case before us, the question is, whether the purchaser shall pay his money where no interest was transferred to him under the judgment. He may have been negligent, but before the purchase is completed, he applies to be relieved, by setting aside the sale. That he had no notice in fact, whatever might be the inference of law, must be presumed, as no one would purchase that which he knew to be of no value. Whatever might be proper after the payment of the money and the execution of the sheriff’s deed, we think when the application is made, at this stage of the proceedings, the sale should be set aside. And this summary mode by motion, being the least expensive, is the proper one.