41 App. D.C. 267 | D.C. Cir. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Many States have, by express statutory enactment, fixed a period within which a judgment debtor may redeem property sold at execution sale. Other States also permit creditors to redeem. In some jurisdictions the statutes require that property sold on execution sale shall bring a designated proportion of its appraised value. Several jurisdictions require a return to be made by the officer conducting the sale, and the'sale must be confirmed by the court, before the rights of the' execution debtor are certainly devested. Deputron v. Young, 134 U. S. 241, 258, 33 L. ed. 923, 931, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 539. In this District, unfortunately, there is no statute allowing redemption, nor is the court required to confirm an execution sale. The failure of the legislature to provide any remedy for a situation where gross injustice is liable to result requires the court carefully to scrutinize its powers, to the end that justice may result.
There is a difference between an attempt by a court to revise one of its judgments, after the expiration of the term in which that judgment was entered, and the assertion by the court of power to set aside an execution sale. Especially is this true where, as here, the sale had not been confirmed by judicial order. As the sale may be made long after the term at which the judgment is entered, so may the court inquire into that sale, without reference to the particular term during which it has been made. The general rule undoubtedly is that, a proceeding to set aside such a sale being equitable in its nature, all that is required is that it shall be instituted promptly, before the rights of innocent third parties have intervened. Thus in Starr v. United States, 8 App. D. C. 552, three months after an execution sale it was discovered that the interest of the judgment debtor in the property levied on was not subject'to levy.
In the present case it is undeniable that the appellee moved promptly, and it is equally clear that the lights of third parties have not intervened; for, upon the record before us, we must assume that the execution creditor was the real purchaser at the sale. Indeed, appellee’s motion was filed immediately after the sale had been brought to the court’s notice by appellant’s petition for possession. We rule, therefore, that the motion ■was seasonably made, and that the court was possessed of jurisdiction to entertain it.
It is true that mere inadequacy of price has seldom been considered sufficient to justify the setting aside of an execution sale. The Supreme Court of the United States, however, has uever gone so far as to say that, under no circumstances, would such a reason warrant a court in exercising its discretion in favor of a judgment debtor. An intimation to the contrary is found in Graffam v. Burgess, 117 U. S. 180, 192, 29 L. ed. 839, 843, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 686: “From, the cases here cited we may draw the general conclusion that, if the inadequacy of price is so gross as to shock the conscience, or if, in addition to gross inadequacy, the purchaser has been guilty of any unfairness, or has taken any undue advantage, or if the owner of the property, or party interested in it, has been for any other reason misled or surprised, then the sale will be regarded as fraudulent and void, or the party injured will be permitted to redeem the property sold. Great inadequacy requires only slight circumstances of unfairness in the conduct of the party benefited by the sale to raise the presumption of fraud.” In Hart v. Hines, 10 App. D. C. 376, the court observed that, while Graffam v. Burgess was a proceeding in equity, its doctrine is
That there was gross inadequacy of price in the present case cannot be gainsaid. In Hart v. Hines, 10 App. D. C. 377, as previously noted, where the discrepancy between the price realized and the value of the property was not so great as here, the court ruled that the inadequacy of price was sufficient to shock the conscience. If, under any circumstances, therefore, a court would be justified in setting aside a sale merely because of inadequacy of price, we think it might be done in this case. After all, the real object of such a sale is to permit the execution creditor to make his judgment. It is not and never-was intended that, through the instrumentality of such a sale, avarice should be encouraged and rewarded. We have seen that the supreme court of Pennsylvania refused to interfere with the exercise of discretion by the trial court in setting aside such a sale where counsel for a mortgage creditor, under a mistaken impression as to the law, had failed to bid, and as a result the price realized
As ruled by this court in Hart v. Hines, supra, it is not in the power of a purchaser at an execution sale, by hastening his deed, to defeat the right of the court over its own process. And in Deputron v. Young, 134 U. S. 258, 33 L. ed. 931, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 539, the court ruled that when an order confirming a sale was vacated before there was any change in the relation of the parties, “the sheriff’s deed fell with it.”
Taking into consideration all the circumstances, we -think
Affirmed.