40 Neb. 432 | Neb. | 1894
On the 9th day of April, 1890, Herman D. Einspahr was the owner of a tract of land in Hall county, Nebraska. On that date there was filed in the office of the clerk of the district court a transcript of a judgment in favor of Abraham Yeazel and against said Einspahr. Execution was duly issued on-this judgment; the land levied upon and sold by the sheriff on the 7th day of June, 1890, Yeazel becoming the purchaser. This sale was duly conr firmed on July 21, 1890, and on or about that date the sheriff executed to Yeazel a conveyance for the real estate. At the time of the levy upon this land, and at the time of its sale, there was growing thereon a crop of wild grass. After the sale of the land, but before the confirmation, Einspahr cut this grass, removed it from the land and sold it to one M. F. White. After Yeazel had procured his conveyance from the sheriff he brought this action in replevin against Einspahr and White, to recover the possession of the wild grass or hay which Einspahr had taken from the land, as above stated. There was a verdict and judgment in the court below for White and Einspahr, and Yeazel brings this suit here on error. All the material
1. That the wild grass growing upon the land at the time of the execution sale was real estate. For the purposes of this opinion we concede the contention to be correct. We do not decide, however, that growing wild grass is always real estate, nor do we decide that it is personal property. A decision of that point is not necessary here and we do not decide it.
2. That Yeazel, by his purchase of the land on the 7th of June, 189Ó, at the execution sale, acquired on that date the legal title to the land; and as the wild grass was then growing on the real estate, Yeazel acquired the title to that. We do not agree with this contention. A purchaser of real estate at an execution sale in this state solely by the purchase does not acquire the title of the execution debtor to the land purchased. Such a purchaser acquires simply the lien which the execution creditor had on said laud at the time.
By section 497a of the Code of Civil Procedure it is provided that the owner of any real estate against which a decree of foreclosure has been rendered, or upon which an execution has been levied to satisfy a judgment or decree of any kind, may redeem the same from the lien of such decree or levy at any time before the sale of the same shall be finally confirmed. Section 498 provides for the examination and confirmation of such sale by the court. Section 499 provides that upon the confirmation of a sale made of real estate sold on execution the sheriff or other officer who made such sale shall make to the purchaser of such real estate as good and sufficient a deed of conveyance for the property or land sold as the person against whom such writ of execution was issued could have made of the same at the time the land became liable
In State Bank of Nebraska v. Green, 10 Neb., 130, Lake, J., speaking for this court, said : “ Under our law governing sales of real property on execution the title of the purchaser depends entirely upon the sale being finally confirmed, and until this is done the rights of the execution debtor are not certainly divested.” And in Lamb v. Sherman, 19 Neb., 681, Maxwell, C. J., speaking for this court on that subject, said: “A purchaser at execution sale of real estate, upon the payment of the purchase money and confirmation of the sale, becomes the equitable owner of the property, and, in a proper case, may compel the issuing of a sheriff’s deed to himself.”
In Freeman, Executions, sec. 323, that author, in commenting upon the titles of the purchaser and the judgment debtor before the latter’s right to redeem has passed, remarks : “ It is certain that prior to the execution of the sheriff’s deed the purchaser has no title in the lands purchased. He cannot recover possession, nor can he, unless expressly authorized by statute, maintain an action for rents and profits. Frequently his interest is spoken of as that of a mere lien-holder. ‘The purchaser, prior to the execution of the sheriff’s deed, holds merely a lien upon the land, differing from the lien of the judgment in this, that it is more specific and may continue after that of the judgment has expired, and that the lien is much nearer a complete enforcement than that of the judgment; the single act of the execution and delivery of the sheriff’s deed being required.’ But the interest of the purchaser is certainly something more than a lien. It seems more like an inchoate title than like a lien, and it* is generally for the:
In Curtis v. Millard, 14 Ia., 128, it was held that “ the general purchaser of real property at a judicial sale made under execution acquires only a lien for the amount of the purchase money and interest, which may ripen into a perfect title at the expiration of the time allowed for redemption.” This case was cited and adhered to in Everingham v. Braden, 58 Ia., 133.
■ The statutes of Wisconsin on the subject of the sale and confirmation of real estate on execution in force in 1882 were substantially the same as ours, and under those statutes the supreme court of Wisconsin, in Allen v. Elderkin, 62 Wis., 627, said: “Under section 3169, Revised Statutes, the title to land sold on the foreclosure of a mortgage does not vest in the purchaser until the confirmation of the sale, and until then the mortgagor, or those claiming under him having the right of possession, may cut and remove all crops which are in condition to be cut and removed in the usual course of good farming.” Taylor, J., delivering the opinion of the court, remarked: “ The only question in this case is whether the title to the mortgaged property vests in the purchaser at a mortgage sale upon the day of sale and the execution of the deed to the purchaser, or upon the confirmation of the sale by the court. If the title vests on the sale and execution of the deed, then the circuit court properly directed a verdict for the plaintiff; but if it does not vest until after confirmation of the sale, then the court should have directed a verdict for
In view of these authorities it seems clear that the legal title of Einspahr to the land sold was not divested, nor ■did Yeazel acquire the legal title to such real estate until ■the delivery to him of the sheriff’s conveyance, made in pursuance of the order of confirmation of the sale. Yeazel acquired an equitable title to the real estate when the sale was confirmed, but the legal title did not pass to him until he received his sheriff’s deed.
3. But counsel for the plaintiff in error insist that the legal title finally acquired by Yeazel to the land he purchased related back to the date the sale was made. This is conceded. Indeed, the title which Yeazel finally acquired related back to the date and the hour that thejudgment to satisfy which the land was sold became a lien upon the real estate; and the conveyance made by the sheriff to Yeazel vested in him the same title, and as good •a title to the real estate as Einspahr himself possessed at the time which the judgment became a lien, except as to subsequent tax liens. But counsel confuse the title to the real estate with the quantum of the estate. This doctrine cf relation has reference only to the title which the execution debtor had to the real estate at the time the judgment became a lien, but it has no necessary reference to the •quantum, whether more or less, of estate which the execution debtor owned at the time the judgment became a lien. The contention of counsel that because the title ■which Yeazel finally acquired related back and vested in him the same title which Einspahr had when the judgment became a lien, therefore, as the wild grass was growing on ■the land at the time the land was sold, Yeazel is owner ■of such grass, will be found upon investigation to be un
Affirmed.