2 S.D. 405 | S.D. | 1892
The facts and controversy of this case are fully stated in the case of Wood v. Conrad, decided at this term of court, and reported in 50 N. W. Rep. 95. On the trial in the court below, neither the plaintiff nor the defendant was satisfied with the judgment of the court, and each appeals, making separate and different assignments of errors. The decision in the above case was based upon the errors assigned by the plaintiff; this one will be founded upon the alleged errors occurring at the trial, affecting defendant’s rights.
The abstract shows that the referee, against the objections of defendant, admitted, as evidence of plaintiff’s title, a sheriff’s deed to the property in controversy, dated April 6, 1888, which had been duly recorded. The objection to its introduction was for the reason that it recites a sale of real property which had been previously sold by the sheriff by virtue of an execution issued against the same defendant, and for the further reason that, at the time of the execution of said deed, the execution debtors had no interest or ownership in the property. The referee overruled this objection, and admitted the deed, and this action of the referee is assigned as error by the defendant. The facts in relation to this deed are that a judgment was obtained against the firm of Cyr & Volin, in favor of Jacob S. G-antz. Upon this judgment an execution was issued, and levied on lots 5 and 6, — the property in controversy, as belonging to John E. Cyr, of the firm of Cyr & Volin, which on the day of sale was sold to Wood, the plaintiff in this action.
The purpose and object of this action is to try the legal title and right of possession to the lots in question, and, unless the respective titles of each party are before the court, there would be nothing to try or determine. The common law action of ejectment does not exist under our Code; therefore the rules which govern under that procedure are not applicable,- but a person claiming an estate or interest in real property which is held adversely to him by one in possession can bring an action to determine the nature of their respective claims, (see Chapter 25, Code Civil Proc.,) and on the trial of such an action, all evidences of title which either party may have can be produced, for it is only by their introduction that the validity and legality of any one of them can be determined. The admission of the sheriff’s deed as evidence was not erroneous, but as to whether it was an evidence of title which was paramount to that of the defendant depends entirely upon the facts as shown by the abstract. The legalicy and va'idity of the deed from the sheriff to the plaintiff is not questioned by the defendant, except upon the ground that the property mentioned in it, which is the property in controversy, had been previously sold by the sheriff on another execution against the same defendant, and that, at the time of the sale under that execution, and for which the sheriff’s deed under which plaintiff claims title was made, the execution debtors had no interest or ownership in the property. To determine this, recourse must be had to the facts. Hall, the grantor of Conrad, the defendant, obtained whatever title he had to the property by virtue of a sale made under an execution issued against the same firm of Cyr & Volin, on the 18th day of May, 1888, which was levied on lots 4 and 5, instead of lots 5 and 6. Neither Cyr nor Volin ever claimed to have nor had either of them any interest in lot 4, which was sold under that execution; therefore, so far as that lot was concerned, the sale passed no title to it; and, as to lot 6, there being no
The levy and sale under the Hall execution — and by virtue of these Hall claims title — the plaintiff contends is void, and of no effect, because previously another execution had been issued on the same judgment, which had not been returned, either satisfied or unsatisfied. The theory upon which this contention is based is that the presumption is that the levy of an execution on sufficient property to satisfy it operates per se as an extinguishment of the judgment. There are no cases that we have found that afford any support to this theory of the levy of an execution upon real estate. It extends, if at all, to a levy upon personal property. A judgment debtor sustains no loss by a mere levy of an execution on land, nor does the creditor gain anything beyond what he already had by the lien of his judgment. The land remains in the possession of the defendant, and he continues to receive and enjoy the rents and profits. But in the case of a levy on personal property, the possession
It will thus be seen that a sale of real property under an