14 Ark. 114 | Ark. | 1848
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a proceeding by petition for a mandamus to compel the defendant, as sheriff, to acknowledge a deed for certain lands, which the petitioner claims as purchaser at a judicial sale.
The petition is very full, as are also the recitals in the alternative writof mandamus. The substance of the ground for mandamus, is, that the defendant, as sheriff, offered for sale certain lots of land, as the property of the Bank : that Johnson, at the instance of the state, and for her benefit, bid off the land: that the State has been, and is yet ready and willing to pay the sum bid and has tendered the same to the sheriff, who refused to receive it: that the sheriff well knowing these facts, executed and delivered to Johnson a deed to the State for said land: that the sheriff refuses to acknowledge such deed. And prays that he be required to do so, or to show cause why he should not be compelled so to do.
The defendant declined acknowledging the deed,and for cause shows, that the land was bid off by Johnson, as the attorney for the Bank, and that the petitioner was wholly unknown to him as purchaser: that he applied to Johnson for the sum bid which he refused to pay; that under the statute, upon such refusal, it became his duty to re-offer the property for sale, and that he did at the time and place, re-offer said land for sale, and sold it to Thomas W. Newton, to whom he executed and acknowledged a deed. Pie positively denies that either Johnson or the State or any one for them, tendered or offered the sum bid, until long after the complete consummation of the second sale to Newton, but admits a tender by the State after that time. That his deputy took lists of the sales and made out deeds for the purchasers; that he has no recollection of having either signed or delivered a deed for the land either to Johnson or the State. He is positive that he never intended to do so: that deeds were made out and signed, ready to be delivered when the purchase money was paid. Such deeds were usually kept in a box in the clerk’s desk, and may have been taken without his knowledge.
To this response the State made two replications: first, that the respondent did not again offer said lots for sale, at the time and place at which the first sale was made: second, that he did execute such deed to the State for said lots, and that the same is his act anddeed. The first of these replications concludes to the country the second, with a verification. And issues being taken upon them, they were submitted for trial to the court sitting as a jury. After hearing the evidence the court found for the defendant and rendered judgment accordingly.
No exception was taken to the opinion of the court on a question of law, except as to the admissibilit}r of a certain deposition. And as there was no motion for a new trial, the correctness of the decision of the court in excluding such evidence presents the only legitimate question to be determined.
The objection to the deposition, was that the official character of the justice, before whom the same was taken in Kentucky, was not sufficiently authenticated, in this, that what purported to be the seal of'the Jefferson Circuit Court, was an impression upon paper, without wax or other soft tenacious substance. The court held this objection good and excluded the deposition. In this the court erred. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the court should have presumed in favor of the regularity of the proceeding from the sister State. There may have been a statute there like our own, declaring that an impression upon paper shall be a sufficient sealing: and whether this be the case or not, the later decisions of the courts go to discourage the objection and hold it frivolous. Pillow vs. Roberts, 13 How. U. S. S. C. Rep. 472. 7 Eng. 822.
But then the question recurs, admitting the depositions to be in other respects, unexceptionable, were they admissible under the issue formed by the parties?
Waiving the consideration of the question whether a writ of mandamus is the appropriate remedy in this case, which we think extremely doubtful, and conceding the power of the court to compel the officer to perform a legal duty, still the court would not exercise such power until a clear legal duty was shown, and it was made to appear that the officer had failed or refused to perform it.
In this case the sheriff is called upon to acknowledge a deed, which purports to have been executed by him as such to the petitioner. It is conceded that the bid was made by Johnson, and it is not shown that the sheriff was aware that the State had any interest in the bid uuless after the second sale of the property; but so far from this, the sheriff, in his answer under oath, positively de nies all knowledge of the fact until after the second sale: And this answer must be taken as true, because it is not questioned by replication, nor is it disproven by other evidence. The sheriff thus is cut off from all knowledge of the acts of the State. He could not request her to pay, because she was unknown to him; and for the same reason an ability or readiness to pay by the Bank, not having been brought home to the sheriff, amounted to nothing. Thus left with Johnson, as the only known bidder, who refused to pay the sum bid, the sheriff, in obedience to the statute, re-offered the property, and sold it to a second bidder, who paid the sum bid to the sheriff. This second sale was a revocation, under authority of the statute, of the first bid; and no act of Johnson’s after that time could restore him to the rights which he had lost by refusing to pay the sum bid when called upon.
The first replication is intended to put in issue the time when the second sale took place. This we have held, if true, a mere erroneous exercise of power which did not affect the validity of the sale. Newton vs. State Bank.
And concede that the State did tender the money bid by Johnson, and claim the benefit of his bid, after the resale of the property, this could not coaler a right on her to demand a deed for the property; because the bid under which she claimed was abandoned by the refusal of the only known bidder to pay the sum bid, and because the second bidder had succeeded to all his rights.
The deed subsequently found in the possession of Johnson, bears date eight days after the second sale of the property, and, if the contents of the deed are to be received as evidence, it must be taken all together, and would show prima facie a deed signed and delivered to Johnson at that date. If so, it was an act not warranted by law, and of course would not be consummated by acknowledgment, by the sanction of a court. Under the circumstances of the case, after the sale to Newton, the first bidder stood in no better situation than any one else; his bid was forfeited; there was no bid; a mere stranger had as much right to demand a deed as he had. But the sheriff positively denies the execution of the deed, and there is no proof of its execution except that arising from presumption: but if there was proof upon this point, it would not avail.
It is not true, as the counsel for the State seem to suppose that the sheriff may charge himself with the sum bid and dispense with the payment of the money. This question was discussed at length in the case of Dickson vs. Gilliland, 1 Cow Rep. 498. In that case the sheriff received a large amount of the money and made a deed to the junior lien creditor under the New York statute. The first purchaser, at the expiration of the time allowed him to redeem, claimed a deed, and it was ordered to be made to him, upon the ground that the sheriff had no right to make the deed until the whole of the purchase money was paid. The policy of the law forbids that sheriffs should be permitted to substitute themselves as debtors to the creditor. But even if this was permitted, it is evident that no court would compel the sheriff to do so. Nor will the readiness of the State to pay authorize a deed after the second sale, because the sheriff has exhausted his power and authority by a sale, and the receipt of the purchase money under it.'
Returning theivto. the only question of law raised by the assignment of errors, the admissibility of the deposition as evidence, limited in its application to the issues formed upon the replication, to the return of the sheriff on the writ of mandamus, we are of opinion that had it been admitted and had proven every fact put in issue by the replications, that still upon the whole case, the decision of the court was right, because the execution of the deed should have been before the sale to Newton and upon payment of'the money.
Let the judgment of the Puluski Circuit Court be in all things affirmed.