36 Ind. 349 | Ind. | 1871
A complaint was filed below in vacation, by the appellees against the appellants, one of the latter, Hoop, being the sheriff of said county. The complaint alleged, in substance, the following facts, viz:
That in the year 1854, Martin M. Ray, who was then the
The object of the action is to enjoin the service of said warrant.
The plaintiffs, Blessing and Sayler, claim;
Second, they claim as bona fide púrchasers for value, under the mortgagor, Martin M. Ray, the right of becoming preferred or favored purchasers of the lot thus bid in by the State and wrongfully sold to Vannoy.
Third, they claim that the warrant from the Auditor of State is unauthorized by law, because Vannoy claims under a deed and not under a certificate of purchase.
, The plaintiffs also insist that they cannot be dispossessed, under the occupying claimant law, until their claim for improvements shall have been adjusted.
On this complaint, on the 14th day of June, 1869, a temporary restraining order was granted until the 1st of July, 1869, at which time the parties appeared, and the plaintiffs moved to continue the restraining order until the final hearing; the defendants filed a demurrer to the complaint, which was overruled, and the plaintiffs’ motion sustained, the defendants excepting.
.We have no brief on behalf of the appellees, and can, therefore, only conjecture the ground on which the injunction or restraining order was granted, or the argument that might be advanced to sustain the same. We proceed to examine the several positions thus assumed in the complaint.
We pass the question, whether the possession of a mortgagor or those claiming under him can, in any case, be deemed to be adverse to the mortgagee or those claiming title by virtue of a sale made under the mortgage, and proceed to inquire whether such possession, assuming it to be adverse, can render such sale as that under consideration void. In the case of McGill v. Doe, 9 Ind. 306, it was held that judicial sales were not affected by adverse possession, not being within the policy of the champerty law. In the case above cited, a passage from a note to Kent’s Com. is quoted, to the
There is as little reason for applying the doctrine of champerty to sales of the kind under consideration as to judicial sales. Indeed, it would be quite detrimental to the public interests to apply the doctrine to such cases. Of course a sale of land on a mortgage to the sinking fund, for non-payment of the money borrowed, could only vest the purchaser with whatever title the mortgagor had in the premises. Such sale could not affect the title of a third party, not acquired through the mortgagor since the execution of the mortgage, in other words, a title .valid in itself and adverse* to the mortgagor.
If the State were required first to acquire possession, where the land might be held adversely, before sale could be made, it would greatly embarrass and impede the collection of the fund; and we think such course is not contemplated by the statutes on the subject of that fund.
The first.objection made in the complaint to the title of Vannoy is not well taken.
■We come to the second point, in which the plaintiffs claim the right of becoming preferred or favored purchasers of the lot.
It is provided by sections three and four, of an act approved January 13th, 1845, Acts 1845,page 19, as follows,viz:
Sec. 3. “After the lapse of six months, any person having a bona fide title claiming under such mortgagor, or any bona fide junior mortgagor or junior incumbrance, shall have the privilege of becoming a favored purchaser of the whole or any portion of the premises covered by any mortgage foreclosed and bid in by the State as aforesaid, according to
Sec. 4. “After the expiration of said six months, any and all lands and lots bid in by the State as aforesaid, and which have been once offered at public sale, shall be subject to private sale at the sinking fund office at Indianapolis, on a credit of five years, the interest to be paid annually, in advance, and the land to forfeit and revert to the State, for any' default of payment according to the terms of purchase.”
The third section above quoted is believed to have been' in force at the time of the sale made by the auditor to Vannoy, and is yet in force so far'as we are advised, except that the duties, therein directed to be performed by the president and commissioners of the sinking fund, are transferred to the Auditor of State, by the first section of the act approved March nth, 1867 (3 Ind. Stat. 487).
The fourth section above quoted is so far modified by the eighth section of the act of March 1 ith, 1867, as that all sales thereafter of lands, forfeited by reason of non-payment of any loan, were required to be made for cash only.
We have set out sections three and four of the act of 1845, as they originally stood, in order the better to ascertain their meaning. We think, taking the two sections together, that where there are conflicting applications to purchase by persons claiming the privilege provided for, the decision between them of the president and commissioners of the sinking fund, and under the later act the decision of. the Auditor of State is final; and that after the expiration .of six months, and the lands have been offered at public sale, and there is no application from any one claiming the privilege to become such favored purchaser, the lands may be right- - fully sold to any person who will buy on the terms prescribed by law.
There is no foundation for the second point made by the plaintiffs.
We now consider the third. This is, that the warrant is '■unauthorized, because Vannoy claims under a deed and not under a certificate of purchase.
The eighth and ninth sections of the act of 1845, provide for the removal of the occupant of land forfeited to the State for failure to pay, and also where the land has been sold and the purchaser holds a certificate of purchase, by means of a warrant from the auditor; but this act has nothing to do with the question under consideration. We have already ¡■seen that by the act of March nth, 1867, all sales of forfeited lands, thereafter to be made, were to be made for cash only; and by the first section of the same act, the Auditor of State .is authorized to make deeds .of lands sold by the commissioners of the sinking fund, or thereafter to be sold by him.
The ninth section of the act of May 4th, 1852, (1 G. & ;H. 420) provides for the removal of the occupant of land, 'where the principal or interest due on land mortgaged shall -be unpaid, by means of a warrant from the Auditor of State, directed to the sheriff of the county in which the lands lie; .and the twelfth section of the same act provides that the purchaser of lands sold by the State for failure to pay principal cr interest .shall have the same remedy. Thus it is seen ithat the .warrant was duly authorized by law.
The last point made is in relation to the claim of the ¡plaintiffs for .improvements.
The statute on the subject of “occupying claimants” (2 G. & H. 285) can have no application whatever to cases like the present. Its terms utterly exclude such application. In the first place, it is only where the party making the improvements has been found, “ in a proper action,” not to be the owner of the property, that the remedy provided for can be applied; secondly, under this statute, the plaintiff in the main action may pay the value of the improvements, deducting the rents, profits, and damages, and take the property ; or in default of such payment, the defendant may keep the property upon paying the value of the land, aside from the improvements. No machineiy is provided for carrying out these provisions in a case where the purchaser from the State of lands mortgaged to the. sinking fund is put in possession by means of a warrant from the auditor; thirdly, neither the mortgagor nor those claiming under him, with actual or constructive notice of the mortgage, can claim the benefit of improvements made by them as against a party having a title by virtue of a sale under the mortgage.
We see no valid objection to the title of Vannoy, nor any reason why the warrant from the Auditor of the State-should not be executed, and are of opinion that the judge below erred in granting the restraining order on the case made by the complaint.
The order of the judge granting the restraining order is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded.