87 Ky. 87 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
In an action pending in the Campbell Circuit Court by John Glenn’s administrator against George B. Hodge, &c., the court decreed a sale of the land in controversy as the property of George B. Hodge, to satisfy a mortgage debt thereon, which mortgage was executed by George B. Hodge to the appellee’s intestate. At the master commissioner’s sale of said land the appellant, Williams, become the purchaser. He executed bonds, to the commissioner for the purchase price of the land, payable in eight, twelve and twenty-four months from date, with the appellant, Johnson, as his surety. The report of sale was confirmed by the court. After the confirmation of the sale, and the maturity of the first and second bonds, the appellants were ruled to show cause why they should not pay these two bonds. They filed separate responses to the rule, in which they al
This court, in the case of the Farmers’ Bank v. Peter, 13 Bush, 594, held that after the confirmation of the decretal sale of a piece of real estate to satisfy a mortgage debt in favor of the Farmers’ Bank, Peter, the purchaser of the real estate, was not entitled to an abatement of the purchase price of the real estate on account of a prior and superior lien thereon for taxes due the State and city of Henderson. This court holding, in that case, that, after the confirmation of a decretal sale, the doctrine of caveat emrptor applied in all its rigor, and that the purchaser could not resist the payment of the purchase price on account of any defect in the title of the property. But it is contended that the Peter case is distinguishable from this case in this : That in that case Peter got a perfect title to the land, except that it was incumbered by a prior lien for taxes ; that he, in fact, got something, which fact was sufficient to uphold the consideration; but, in this case, the appellant, Williams, got no title whatever; therefore, there was a total failure of consideration for the bonds. But the court in the Peter case announced the broad doctrine that in judicial sales of. real estate there is no warranty of title; that while the chancellor will not compel his vendee to pay for the land purchased at his sale, if the purchaser makes known before the sale is made complete by confirmation that he acquires no
Rorer on Judicial Sales, section 174, second edition, says: “The rule is, as to all judicial sales, except as regards fraud, that the maxim caveat emptor applies. Let the buyer beware. There is no warranty of title or quality. They are sales by the court, and there is no one to go back on if the buyer takes nothing. * * * But although sales, whether judicial or on execution, are made subject to the doctrine of caveat emptor, yet, if misrepresentations be made by the person selling, and be relied on by the buyer to the injury of the latter, the sale will be set aside.”. The rule announced in Rorer is sustained by the current of authorities, and was clearly recognized as correct by this court in the Peter case. ■ So it may be regarded as a settled rule of law, that after a judicial sale of real estate has been made complete by a confirmation of the sale, the purchaser cannot successfully resist the payment of the purchase price on the ground that he acquired no title to the property, unless he can show that he was induced to make the purchase by the misrepresentations of the creditor or person making the sale as to the condition of the title, and that he did not discover, and could not have discovered with reasonable diligence, the true condition of the title until after the confirmation of the sale. The apellants did not allege either of the latter facts. They, therefore, cannot successfully resist the payment of their bonds.
The judgment of tbe lower court is affirmed.