8 Paige Ch. 285 | New York Court of Chancery | 1840
The following opinion was delivered by the vice chancellor, when the case was before him :
The only question in this case is as to the effect of the redemption by the defendant upon the judgment in his favor, against the complainant and others,
The foregoing are all the legislative proceedings on this part of the subject. If the judgment of the creditor who first redeems must be deemed to be satisfied by this act of redemption, it would seem unjust in the legislature to permit another judgment creditor to redeem the premises from him without paying the amount of the judgment thus satisfied by the redemption, as well as to reimburse him the sum paid to acquire the title of the first purchaser. This he is allowed to do by the statute, unless the judgment under which he seeks to redeem is younger than that of the creditor from whom he redeems. Suppose three judgments, standing in the order of priority, Nos. 1, 2, 3 ; a sale takes place under No. 1, and the owner of No. 3, at the end of fifteen months, redeems by reimbursing the purchaser his bid and interest. The law then vests in him the interest in the land sold which the original purchaser had acquired ; and yet the next man, No. 2, may redeem from him, by simply refunding the advance which No. 3 had made, without paying any part of the judgment No. 3. If No. 3 was once satisfied by the redemption, it must, on principle, continue satisfied forever.
Again; suppose No. 2 had not redeemed from No. 3, and the owner of the latter had received a deed from the sheriff, in pursuance of the sale on the execution issued on No. 1, if judgment No. 3 thus becomes satisfied, it can never afterwards be used either as an instrument under which to redeem or otherwise. A satisfied judgment cannot be said to have a lien on the defendant’s land ; and under no other can a redemption be made. But the supreme court held in Ex parte Peru Iron Comp. (7 Cowen, 540,) that though a judgment creditor has once redeemed and ta
The occasion for the present controversy arises from the circumstance that no one bid at the sale the full value of the property. The two elder judgment creditors had no motive other than to secure their debts, and therefore did not bid beyond the amount due. If the defendant had redeemed, the whole of the present controversy might have been avoided. He was not prevented doing so by any fraud, accident or mistake. He chooses to speculate on events, and must take the consequences. If his view of the law was correct, the transaction could not have assumed a shape more to his advantage. He would have paid off the three judgments and gotten rid of the creditor’s bill with costs. In consequence of his mistake in the law, it has turned out to be an unfortunate speculation to him ;
Again; the title which a purchaser or redeeming creditor acquires to a piece of land, is derived from (he judgment under which the sale is made, and not under that by force of which it is redeemed. The title of which the defendant was seized at the doclcetting of the former judgment is conveyed by the sheriff, and no allusion is made in the deed to the judgment under which the redemption took place. This circumstance it appears to me is decisive against the ground assumed by the plaintiff. Nor is this view of the case changed by the fact that the defendant in
The Chancellor. The vice chancellor unquestionably came to the correct conclusion in this case, that the redemption of the premises from the sheriff’s sale under a prior judgment, is not either in law or equity a satisfaction of the junior judgment of the redeeming creditor. At the expiration of the twelve months from the time of the sale, all the right and title of the judgment debtor to redeem the premises from the sheriff’s sale is forever gone. As to him, therefore, it is perfectly immaterial whether the first purchaser takes a deed of the premises at the end of the fifteen months, or the conveyance is made hy the sheriff to the junior creditor. The benefit he receives under the provisions of the statute arises principally at the time of the sheriff’s sale; as the right of any junior creditor to redeem upon the payment of the amount bid and interest, will induce the owner of the first judgment to bid at least to the amount of his debt, if the property is worth more. He may also be incidentally benefitted by a second redemption; as the second junior creditor, if he redeems, is bound not only to pay the original bid and interest, but also the amount of the second or intermediate judgment under which the first redemption took place. But there is nothing in the statute which, even by implication, conveys the idea that the redeeming creditor is to lose his whole judgment if he thinks proper to redeem property which he supposes has been sold below its value. Very few creditors would be found willing to avail themselves of the privilege of redeeming, if the consequence of such redemption was to be an extinguishment of their whole debt; or even if they were to be subjected to the expense and vexation of a chancery suit with the judgment debtor, to ascertain from
In the case of the Peru Iron Company, (7 Cowen’s Rep. 540,) one of the questions distinctly presented for the consideration of the court was, whether (he lien of the Webber judgment, assigned to Finch, was discharged by his redemption from the first sale by virtue of his ownership of that judgment. And the court held that it was not discharged, but was still a subsisting judgment against Winter’s heirs, so as to authorize Finch to redeem from the second sale under Cady’s execution upon the Cohen judgment. And in the recent case of Emmet’s adm’rs v. Bradstreet, (20 Wend. Rep. 50,) the same court decided that the redemption by the junior creditor was no bar to an action to enforce the payment of his judgment, although the value of the lands redeemed exceeded the amount of the judgment and the redemption money. This being the settled rule of law on the subject, there is no principle of equity which calls upon this court to establish a different rule here. Although the redeeming creditor may have made a good speculation by redeeming from the first sale, he did not make it at the expense of or for the benefit of the judgment debtor, whose, right to redeem was forever gone. The latter is not therefore entitled to the benefit of the speculution, for which he neither furnished funds nor ran any risk.
And as there was no excuse for the complainant’s proceeding with this suit after the offer made to him by the defendant, the vice chancellor properly charged him with costs ; although he permitted him still to have the benefit of the offer, which was renewed in the defendant’s answer. The decree appealed from must therefore be affirmed with costs.