4 Barb. 159 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
The first, and one of the most important questions presented in this case, is whether the amount in controversy is sufficient to give this court jurisdiction. It is provided by the revised statutes, (2 R. S. 3d. ed. 234, § 61,) that “ the court of chancery shall dismiss every suit concerning property, where the matter in dispute, exclusive of costs, does not exceed the value of one hundred dollars, with costs to the defendant.” This cause having been commenced in the late court of chancery, must of course be subject to this rule. The plaintiff’s right to appear in this court and controvert the mortgage claimed by Solomon Ely as assignee, rests solely on the fact that on the 17th of March, 1846, being the owner of a judgment against James McKnight and John McKnight, which was a lien on the mortgaged premises, he bid off those premises at the sheriff’s sale, under an execution issued upon that judgment, for $70,13, and took the usual sheriff’s certificate as evidence of such purchase. The bill of complaint was filed during the summer of 1846, several months before the plaintiff could have been entititled to a deed from the sheriff. At the time of the filing of the bill, therefore, it could not be known whether the premises would be redeemed by the defendant in the execution, or his grantee, within the year after the sale; or whether the title would be acquired within three months thereafter by some other judgment creditor.
The plaintiff claims that by the purchase at the sheriff’s sale he became the owner of the equity of redemption. In support of that position, he relies principally on the case in re Scrug
The case in Hopkins, like the others above cited, was decided under the act of April 12, 1830, which did not declare when the title should Vest in. the purchaser. Yet under that act it was well settled, by the cases above cited, that no title was acquired until the execution of the sheriff’s deed ; until which time the purchaser held only a lien on the premises sold. Under the revised statutes, this question is no longer left to inference. It is provided (2 R. S. 3d. ed. 470, § 63,) that “the right and title of the person against whom the execution was issued, to any real éstate which shall be sold thereby, shall not be divested by such sale,- until the expiration of fifteen months from the time of such sale.” And by a subsequent clause of the same section it is declared that if such real estate shall not have been redeemed as therein provided, and a deed shall be executed in pursuance of a sale, the grantee in such deed shall be deemed vested with the legal estate from the time of the sale on such execution, only for the purpose of maintaining an action for any injury to such real estate. I think it is clear, therefore, that at the time of filing the bill of complaint in this cause the plaintiff had only a lien on the premises in question for $70,13, and interest from the date of his purchase. It remains to be seen whether there are other facts in this case that bring it within the requirement of the statute, as to jurisdiction.
Solomon Ely, in his notice published for the purpose of foreclosure under the statute, claimed that there was due on the mortgage, on the 13th of July, 1846, $1175,37. The plaintiff controverts the amount thus claimed, and urges that part, if not all, of the mortgage money had been satisfied by the payment, or that the debt was liable to be extinguished by an equitable
By these cases it is well established that the plaintiff’s claim in dispute must exceed the value of $100, to give the court jurisdiction. It is not enough that the property on which the plaintiff’s claim is a lien exceeds that value; nor that a lien exceeding that amount, claimed by one of the defendants, is controverted by the plaintiff. The property in dispute, belonging to, or claimed by the plaintiff, or the extent of the plaintiff’s interest in the property in controversy, furnishes the test of jurisdiction. The application of this well settled rule, therefore, to the facts of this case, shows plainly that the amount of the plaintiff’s lien is the extent of value of the property in dispute, and that this court has no jurisdiction of the controversy.
The defendant sets up the objection in his answer, and claims the same benefit of it as if he had presented it by demurrer ; and the objection being well taken, I have no discretion as to the course to be pursued, but must dismiss the bill with costs.