138 Ga. 150 | Ga. | 1912
The action is by Jack Buis against W. J. Branch, sheriff, Lott & Peterson, and Wash and'E. D. Douglas, to cancel a sheriff’s deed, and for other relief. The petition after 'amendment was dismissed on demurrer. In the original petition it was alleged as follows: Martha J. Taylor obtained against the plaintiff a judgment for $500; she held, as security for the note which was the basis of the judgment, a deed to his land; he also owed Lott and Peterson $375, which was secured by a second mortgage on the land and a mortgage on a mule. Execution issued on the Taylor
About two years after the filing of the petition it was amended by alleging: that on the day of the sale the plaintiff informed the attorney that he had arranged with the judgment creditor, Taylor, that if he could raise $150 or $200, the sale would be postponed, and that he had about perfected a sale of the timber which would yield this sum, whereupon the attorney said that he had seen Lott and Peterson and they had agreed to buy the land on the terms' stated in his original petition; that when the sheriff offered the land for sale the attorney publicly announced that whoever might bid off the property would have to pay, in addition to his bid, the amount of the Lott and Peterson mortgage; that the sheriff did not sell the land in the usual manner, did not read the advertisement or cry aloud the land, but stepped to the front of the court-house door and announced that he would sell the Euis property, addressing his remarks to the attorney and to the plaintiff; that the attorney bid on the property $610, the judgment creditor bid $615, and the attorney bid $620, when the property was knocked off to
The petition is projected on the theory that the sheriff’s sale was void, and it is prayed that the sheriff’s deed to the purchasers and the deed to their vendees with notice be cancelled. The plaintiff is not seeking specific performance of any agreement between himself and the purchasers. What he demands is the cancellation of the deeds, on the ground that the effect of his arrangement with the attorney who bid for the ■ purchasers, and the attorney’s statement (while the sale was in progress) that prospective buyers would take title subject to a second mortgage on the property, was to chill the bidding and allow the purchasers to obtain the land at an undervalue. The plaintiff’s proposition, stated differently, is, that 'he and the purchasers conspired to deter bidding at the sale in order that the land might bring less than its value, and when this was accomplished the purchasers refused to consummate the arrangement which induced him to enter into the conspiracy to depress the sale, and that this refusal on the part of the purchasers justifies a rescission of the sale.
It may be declared to be the settled policy of the law that sheriffs’ sales shall be fairly conducted, and in such manner that the property to be sold shall not be needlessly sacrificed. Whenever it is made to appear that a sale under process is infected with fraud, irregularity, or error to the injury of either party, the sale will be set aside. Civil Code, § 6032. A combination to suppress the usual competition at a' sheriff’s sale is illegal from considerations
This is not a case where a purchaser who, without any agreement or connivance with the defendant in execution, deters bidders by falsely representing that he is buying the property for the benefit of the defendant. In such a ease the 'defendant does not participate in the purchaser’s conduct, and comes into court with clean hands, and is entitled to reparation for the injury accruing from the purchaser’s false representation. According to his own plead
Judgment affirmed.