139 Ky. 686 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
■ In this suit to wind np the affairs of a mining corporation, the petition failed to describe the real estate owned by it. A judgment was entered appointing a receiver to take charge of all the prop
It has been decided by this court in Carpenter v. Strother’s Heirs, 15 B. Mon., 295, and in Megowan v. Pennebaker, 3 Metc. 502, that a sale cannot be set aside after the expiration of the term at which it is confirmed unless the judgment was void. Dawson v. Litsey, 10 Bush 411, decides that an order confirming a sale made under the judgment of a court is final. Bean v. Haffendorfer, 84 Ky., 685, 2 S. W. 556, 3 S. W. 138; Kincaid v. Tutt, 88 Ky., 392, 11 S. W. 297; section 518 Civil Code.
The question, therefore, recurs in this case, whether the judgment under which the land was sold is void. Section 125 of the Civil Code requires that a petition for the recovery of land, or for its subjection to a demand of the plaintiff, must describe it so that it may be identified. Under this section it was held in Blackwell v. Townsend, 91 Ky. 609, 16 S. W. 587, that where neither the petition nor the judgment of sale nor the order confirming the sale described the land at all so that it could be identified, a judgment for the sale of so much of the land as did not lie in the county where the action was pending was void.' The court held that the jurisdiction to
We are aware of no authority nor reason for holding that a judgment of sale of real estate in such a proceeding as this, where the judgment did not describe the land sold, was void. Where a sale is erroneous only, the purchaser will not be relieved on that account if the proceedings in the conduct of the sale were regular. May v. Ball (Ky.), 60 S. W. 722; Blake v. Wolf (Ky.), 64 S. W. 910; Scott v. Ford’s Ex. (Ky.), 50 S. W. 552; Haynes v. Payne, 5 Ky. Law Rep., 242.
Another objection urged against the sale by the purchaser was that a part of the land which he bought was incumbered, there being a lien of $100 owing to the vendor. While it may have been to the interest of the parties that the holders’ of all liens against the property should have been parties to the action, so that the property might have been sold free of incumbrance, yet where the holder of a lien was not a party to this action, it was not error to
The judgment of the circuit court setting aside the sale and quashing the sale bonds is reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.