30 Ind. 185 | Ind. | 1868
This case was ejectment by the appellee against the appellant to recover lot numbered 120, in the town of Warsaw. The defendant answered by general denial.
There was a trial of the cause, resulting in a finding and judgment for the plaintifl'. A new trial was granted on the payment of costs by defendant within less than one year from the date of the first judgment. There was a second trial at the January term, 1868, resulting in a finding and judgment in favor of the plaintifl! The evidence is in the record by a bill of exceptions. It was admitted in an agreement of facts filed in the case that the title to the premises was in the plaintiff, unless the same had been divested by virtue of a certain sheriff’s sale and deed of conveyance made in pursuance thereof to the defendant Wright. At the request of the defendant below, the court, trying the cause without a jury, made a special finding of facts, as follows: — “ The plaintiff', on the 1st day of November, 1859, was the owner of the lot in controversy, and is still the owner, unless he has been divested of his title therein by virtue of a sheriff’s deed executed by the sheriff' of said Kosciusko county, upon a sale of said lot on an execution issued upon a judgment, as set forth in the finding; that on the 1st day of November, 1859, Peter
From the facts so found the court deduced the following conclusions as matters of lav/,to wit: “That the sale made by the sheriff', of the said lot, was void, for the reason that no part of said real estate was offered for sale by said sheriff; that said lot was at the time of said sale susceptible of division, and should have been offered in parcels; and that the entire lot should not have been offered for sale, until a portion 'of said lot had first been offered for sale; and that the defendant, having kept the plaintiff' out of possession of said lot without right, is liable to pay for the use thereof.” Then follows the judgment for the plaintiff in the usual form.
The defendant below, claiming that the finding of the court on the facts of the case was defective, moved for a venire ele novo, which was overruled, to which he excepted; and he brings the evidence before this court by a bill of exceptions. He also excepted to the conclusions of law
The question made in the case is, was the sheriff’s sale of the lot in controversy to Wright void, because the entire lot was sold -without being first offered in parcels ? The appellee makes no other attack upon the title of the appellant. The section of the statute which must control the decision in this case is as follows: “If the estate shall Consist of several lots, tracts, and parcels, each shall be offered separately; and no more of any real estate shall be offered for sale, than shall be necessary to satisfy the execution, unless the same is not susceptible of division.” 2 G. & H. 249, sec. 466.
Where, as in the case of Catlett v. Gilbert, 23 Ind. 614, the property sold as an entirety was occupied as two separate parcels, and this fact was known to the sheriff and the purchaser, there can bo no serious doubt that the sale cannot be sustained, for the express letter of the statute has been disregarded. Rut where there is no actual division of the property, and the point must be determined by the sheriff-, whether or not the same is susceptible of division, a more difficult question is presented, and one requiring the exercise of official discretion. Upon the conclusion reached, the sheriff must base his official action, and unless that action operates as a fraud upon the execution defendant or his creditors, it cannot be reviewed by the court. The statute commits to the judgment of the officer the solution of the inquiry whether the property can be divided or not, and upon a reasonable exercise of this judgment the purchaser has a right to rely. Wherever there may be an honest difference of opinion, the conclusion reached by the officer must be final.
In the case before us it is insisted that the finding of the court omits facts rendered material by the evidence, and that the facts found do not show an abuse of official discretion by the sheriff and that the finding is not sustained by
The return to the execution shows that there were other executions in the sheriff’s hands which were liens upon the property sold. It also very clearly appears that the lot was peculiarly suitable for residence property, and for its use in that manner, it was desirable it should remain as one piece or parcel of land. It is true that some of the witnesses testify that the property might have been divided, and one part used for a livery stable or blacksmith’s shop and the other portion for a residence, and the value of the entire property would have been injured only to- the extent of from §100 to §300. But there are other witnesses who consider the use of a part for the purposes of a shop or stable as destructive- of the value of the remainder as a residence site. But if it be admitted that the evidence sustains the finding of the court, and that the conclusion of law thereupon, that the property was susceptible of division, is correct, still there is nothing in either the evidence or the finding- authorizing the conclusion that the sheriff’ had acted in bad faith or had abused the discretion confided to him by law. Nothing short of such proof can justify the court in disregarding the sale, where it is otherwise unobjectionable.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. Costs here.
Frazer, J., having been of counsel, was absent.