5 Blackf. 590 | Ind. | 1841

Sullivan, J.

Ejectment tp recover a tract' of land purchased at sheriff’s sale. Plea, not guilty. Verdict and judgment for the plaintiff.

The case comes before ias on-exceptions to the opinion of the Court in receiving certain testimony offered by the plaintiff, and rejecting testimony offéred by the defendant.

The testimony offered by the plaintiff and objected to by the defendant, was a, writ of ji. fa. issued from the Warren Circuit Court in favour of one Cronlchite against Tillotson and another, commanding the sheriff to levy the sum of-, dated the 14th of April, 1840, and the return of the sheriff to the writ. The return was, that on the 20th of May, 1840, the sheriff had levied on a certain tract of land therein described, given in execution by Tillotson, and Tillotson refusing to give any other property in execution, the sheriff levied on another tract of land, (the same for the possession of which this suit was brought,) and after duly advertising, &c. sold and conveyed" thé -latter tract to the lessors of the plaintiff. .The execution was returnable on the 8th of June, and the sale was made on the 12th of that month.

The defendant objected to reading the execution and return; 1st, Because the sale was made after the return day *591of the writ; and 2ndly, Because the tract of land given in execution by Tillotson was not first sold.

There is no foundation for the first objection. It has been repeatedly decided, that a sale on ■ an execution ¿fief -the return day is valid, provided the levy was made previously. Prescott v. Wright, 6 Mass. 20.—Hartwell v. Root, 19 Johns. 345.—Heywood v. Hildreth, 9 Mass. 375.

The second objection is equally unavailing. The statute (R. S. 1838, p. 277,) is directory to the sheriff. The purchasers’ title is not affected ■ by the failure of the sheriff to. sell the land surrendered in execution,’ any more than if - he had sold without giving notice. Frakes v. Brown, 2 Blackf. 295. Besides, there máy have been proof adduced upon the trial, t'o show that Tillotson was not the bona fide owner of the property directed'by him to be sold; if so, the sheriff’s return, on that" point, was unobjectionable.

The defendant then offered the following testimony, vjz. a judgment of the same Court in favour of E. Rodgers (one of the lessors of the plaintiff,) and. another against the said Tillotson, and a ji. fa. issued thereon -returned levied on the same land and sold to B. F. Gregory and Elisha Rodgers. He furthermore offered to prove, that - B. F. Gregory was the attorney of Rodgers in procuring the last-named judgment. The plaintiff objected to the testimony and the objection was sustained by the Court.

The testimony offered was irrelevant and therefore inadmissible. The object of the defendant was, as he informs us, to show that there’ were irregularities' in the judgment, and execution last-mentioned, of which Rodgers as the plaintiff in that suit, and Gregory as his attorney, were bound to take notice. But if this were so, and the judgment - and execution last-mentioned were entirely void, how could that affect the title of the purchasers acquired under the first-mentioned sale? ’ That title was acquired by a purchase at a sheriff’s sale, under a regular execution issued upon a judgment of a Court -of competent jurisdiction. , The title was in all-respects complete, and it could not,-certainly, be divested or impaired by showing that they held another title to the-same land, on the validity of which they did not- rely themselves. . ’ • - " ’

W. M.' Jenners and R. A. Chandler, for the appellant. R. C. Gregory, for the appellee.

The Court, .therefore, did not err in receiving the testimony offered by the-plaintiff, nor in rejecting that offered by the defendant. • 1

The record shows that certain instructions were given by the Court to the jury. The appellant contends they' were erroneous. The record does not state at whose request they were given, nor that exceptions were taken to them at the trial. The instructions, moreover, were substantially correct. .

Per Curiam.

The judgment is affirmed with costs.

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