43 Miss. 497 | Miss. | 1871
It appears from the record in this case that the appellee, as guardian, sold, on the 17th day of March, 1860, at public auction, under a decree of the probate court of Copiah county, a negro slave named J'oe, the property of his ward, to John Storm, the appellant, on a credit of ten months, for the sum of $1,335, for which he executed his note with sureties to the said guardian.
The appellee instituted suit upon this note to the November term of the circuit court of Lawrence county, and obtained a judgment thereon at the May term, 1867, of said court, for the sum of $1,903 50, and from this judgment a writ of error was prosecuted by the appellant in the high court of errors and appeals, and at the April term thereof, 1868, the said judgment was affirmed.
After the affirmance of the said judgment the appellant filed his original and amended bills of complaint in the chancery court of said Lawrence county, and on the 14th day of July, 1868, obtained an injunction restraining the collection of the judgment. The said bills allege that the order or decree of the probate court was void; that in consequence thereof the appellant acquired no title to the property sold, and that the consideration of the note given to secure the purchase money had entirely failed; and that he was not
The appellee, in his answers to the said bills of complaint, denies that the decree of the probate court under which said sale was made was void, and that the consideration of the note given for the purchase money at said sale had failed, and insists that the appellant’s defense, if any he had, should have been made at law.
The appellee moved the court upon the bills, answers, exhibits, and proofs, to dissolve the injunction which had been granted in this case, which motion was sustained by the court, and the injunction dissolved. Hence the cause comes into this court by appeal on the part of the appellant, who assigns for error the action of the court below in dissolving the injunction.
The counsel for the appellant insists that the order or decree of the probate court authorizing the sale of the slave was void, but does not inform us of the defect in the proceedings of that court that renders it invalid. Upon an inspection of the record of the proceedings in the probate court with reference to said decree of sale, we can find no other defect than that in the sheriff’s return of the service of process, which does not make the decree void, but goes only to the question of error. And the parties interested in said decree not having comifiained of the insufficiency of the return by a direct proceeding to reverse it, it must be regarded as a valid decree of sale.
The rule at present in England, though formerly otherwise, is, that a sale of personal property implies an affirmation by the vendor that the chattel is his, and therefore he warrants
The distinction between goods in possession of the vendor and those not in his possession, so decisive repudiated in England, seems to be fully upheld in this country, and tbe rule here is that as to goods of the vendor there is an implied warranty; but where the goods sold are in possession of a third party at the time of the sale there is no such warranty, the maxim of caveat emptor applies, and the purchaser buys at bis peril. 2 Kent, (11th ed.), 631; Dresser v. Ainsworth, 9 Barbour, 619; Edick v. Crim, 10 Barbour, 445; and Long v. Hickingbottom, 28 Miss., 772.
But it is equally well settled that in the case of sales by\ executors, administrators, and other trustees, there is no implied warranty either of title, or soundness or quality of the property sold. And where the vendee has protected himself by covenants of warranty, and is put in possession, he cannot defend himself against the payment of the purchase money without’a previous eviction, unless in cases where there has been fraud. And this rule applies as well to personal as real property.
In the case at bar, the appellant had been in the peaceable and undisturbed possession of the slave, and enjoyment of his services from the time of the purchase until his emancipation in 1865, a period of more than five years, without returning or offering to return said slave to the appellee, and now resists the collection of the purchase money on the ground of a failure of consideration, resulting from an alleged want of title. In the case of Joslin v. Caughlin, the purchaser of the property at the sale set up the defense to the collection of the purchase money, that the decree, under which the sale was made, was void for the want of notice.to the parties interested, and that no title passed by the sale, and hence the consideration of the note given for the property had entirely failed. But the court very promptly decided
Parties who set up the illegal action of the executor or administrator, as a defense for not performing their contract, ought to return or offer to return the property. And in the case of Washington v. McCaughan, 34 Miss., it was said: “ The rule is now firmly settled in this court in regard to a sale of personal estate by an administrator, that the 'pur.chaser, retaining possession, and not offering to restore the property to the administrator, shall not be permitted to resist the payment of the purchase money on the ground that the sale was invalid.”
In the present case the appellant alleges as a reason for not returning the property until it was out of his power to do so, that he was not aware of his want of title to the property, until within ten days of the time of filing his original bill to enjoin the collection of the judgment at law against him, and perhaps even then he might not have made that important discovery but for the extraordinary stimulus of the .emancipation of the slave. The record shows that he lived within twenty-five miles of the probate court that made the order of sale, and neglected for more than five years to examine into the validity of the proceedings of the probate court. It was but reasonable to suppose that the suit at law for the recovery of the purchase money, would have been sufficient to have induced him- to investigate his title, yet it seems he
The record in this case presents no valid ground of defense, either at law or in equity, against the payment of the purchase money. The case above quoted, of Ware v. Houghton which is very similar in its facts, we regard as decisive of this case. The court there say, that “ if a party, by any cause, becomes unable to return the property before he discovers the defect of title, it would seem more equitable that he should be left to his recourse on his covenants, and if he has not protected himself by covenants, that he should be without remedy.”
It is a well-established principle of law that a purchaser under a void judgment or decree, acquires no title to the property purchased. But it is equally well settled that if the judgment or decree be only erroneous, he acquires a good title to the property purchased under it. The reason given is, that great inconvenience would follow a contrary doctrine, so that none would buy in such cases, and execution of judgments and decrees would not be done. Manning’s case, 8 Coke, 192. In 8 Coke, 284, it was held that if an erroneous judgment is given, and the sheriff, by force of a fieri facias, sell a term of the defendant, and afterward the judgment is reversed by writ of error, yet the term shall not be restored, but only the money for which it was sold; because the sheriff was commanded and compelled by the writ of execution to sell it. The uniform current of authorities sanctions this
In the present case, the decree of the probate court authorizing the sale of the property, being only erroneous, the appellant acquired a good and valid title to the slave by his purchase, which continued so until it was destroyed by the emancipation of the slave, and he must therefore sustain the loss occasioned by that event.
For these reasons, the decree of the court below must be affirmed.