77 Ind. 268 | Ind. | 1881
This suit was brought by the appellee, against the appellants, to recover the possession of lot 22 in the .■southwest square of the city of Anderson, in Madison county, Indiana. The appellants William Y. and Sarah Shanklin •demurred jointly and severally to the complaint. Their demurrers were overruled. They, together with the appellant David W. Swank, then answered the complaint by a general denial. The other appellant Benjamin Shelly made default, and the complaint was- taken as confessed against him. The cause was submitted to the court for trial. The ■court, upon the request of the appellants, found the facts •specially, and the conclusions of law arising thereon, in fa
The facts found by the court are as follows : “On the 5th day of April, 1876, the Eagle Chair Company, a corporation organized according to the laws of the State of Indiana, was the owner in fee simple of lot 22,■ in the southwest square of the city of Anderson, Madison county, Indiana ;• that, .on said day, said Eagle Chair Company, David W. Swank, Elisha B. Holloway and Alfred Walker executed to this plaintiff a note for $1,500, due twelve months after date, with interest at ten.per cent, per annum after maturity, and five per centum on the principal sum as attorney’ fees, which note was executed for money by plaintiff loaned to said Eagle Chair Company; that, on the. 10th day of April, 1876, the said Eagle Chair Company executed to plaintiff its mortgage on said real estate to secure the payment of said note; that afterward, on the 16th day of April, 1877, the plaintiff filed in this court her complaint on said note, and to foreclose said mortgage, making defendants thereto the makers of said note and all junior incumbrances of said real estate, except the Citizens National Bank of Greensburg, Indiana; that, after the execution of said mortgage and before the filing of said complaint, to' wit, at the December term, 1876, said bank recovered, in the Madison Circuit Court, a judgment against the said Eagle Chair Company for $389.74, which was a lien upon said real estate, junior to the plaintiff’s mortgage; that said bank was made defendant to said complaint by the plaintiff to the suit for foreclosure, but was not servéd with summons in said cause; that, on the-day of May, 1877, while said cause was pending, the Eagle Chair Company entered into a written agreement with David W. Swank,
Upon the foregoing finding of facts, the court found, as a conclusion of law, that the appellee was the owner and entitled to the possession of the premises in controversy.
The judgment recovered by the Citizens National Bank of Cfreensburg, though obtained after the execution of the appellee’s mortgage, was a lien upon the equity of redemption which the Eagle Chair Company, the mortgagor and judgment debtor, then had in the real estate in controversy. And the sale of this equity of redemption, upon an execution legally issued upon said judgment, and the conveyance of the premises by the proper officer at the proper time to the purchaser, Henry, transferred to him the mortgagor’s interest in the land, unless the suit commenced by the ap
It is admitted by the appellee, that if Henry had purchased the equity of redemption before its suit to foreclose had been commenced, upon an execution issued upon the bank judgment, the title would have passed. But it is insisted that, as the sale was made after its suit to foreclose was commenced, Henry purchased subject to the pending suit against the Eagle Chair Company, and is bound by the results of that suit to the same extent that said company is bound; that the pendency of the suit was notice to him, and that by his purchase he simply stepped into the shoes of the Eagle Chair Company. But to this it may be answered, that the judgment of the bank was a lien upon the interest which the judgment debtor had in the premises in December, 1876, at the time when the judgment was rendered, and that the deed which Henry afterwards obtained from the sheriff will take effect by relation from the date of the judgment, and pass to the purchaser the title to the premises in controversy, which the Eagle Chair Company then had. In the case of Smith v. Allen, 1 Blackf. 22, the court says r “The purchaser’s title at sheriff’s sale takes effect from the date of the judgment.” Doe v. Horn, 1 Ind. 363 ; Bellows v. McGinnis, 17 Ind. 64; Ashley v. Eberts, 22 Ind. 55.
Rorer on Judicial Sales, sec. 976, says: “Where judgments are liens-, the deed of the sheriff relates back to the date of the judgment, and carries title from that date against all claims and liens junior thereto.” McCormick v. McMurtrie, 4 Watts, 192; Martin v. Martin, 7 Md. 368; Osterberg v. Union Trust Co., 93 U. S. 424, 428.
The claim of the appellee to the equity of redemption rests upon its suit to foreclose its mortgage, and is confessedly junior to the judgment in favor of the bank against the Eagle Chair Company.
The court not only finds that Shanklin and Swank paid Henry the amount which he paid for the lot, but that he held, from that time until he' obtained a deed for the lot, the certificate of purchase in trust for them, and as security against his liability as their surety on a note; that they aftei’wards paid the note on which Henry was surety, and that he, with the consent of Shanklin, conveyed to Swank, who conveyed to Sarah Shanklin. It is not expressly found by the court whether or not Mrs. Shanklin paid Swank any consideration for the conveyance to her, but we think the fair inference from the facts found is, that she did not.
Had Shanklin and Swank, or either of them, purchased the lot at the sheriff’s sale on the judgment which they, with Walker, had agreed to pay, in equity such purchase would be regarded as a payment of the judgment, and they would not be permitted to assert the title so acquired against the judgment-debtor. And so, too, the payment to Henry of the amount paid by him at sheriff’s sale for the lot „will, in equity, be regarded as a' redemption of the lot from the sheriff’s sale for the benefit of the Eagle Chair Company, for whom, and for a valuable consideration, they had agreed to pay the judgment. The payment to Henry, and the claim of the appellants to hold the title procured by such payment for their benefit, is analogous to the claim of a party whose duty it was to pay the taxes upon land, but who, instead of doing so, buys the land at tax sale for his own benefit. The rule is, that a purchase made by one whose duty it was to pay the taxes shall operate as payment only. . Cooley on Taxation, p. 346. The law does not allow a party to acquire rights as against a third party by the neglect of a duty which
We conclude that the payment to Henry and the subsequent conveyances to Swank and Sarah Shanklin, can only operate as payment of the judgment which it was the duty of Swank, Shanklin and Walker to pay, and that the judgment below should be affirmed.
Pee Cueiam. — It is ordered, upon the foregoing opinion, that the judgment below be affirmed, at the cost of appellants.