Affirming.
Appellee obtained judgment in an action for debt against appellant upon which execution issued and was levied by the sheriff on a tract of land owned by appellant in Perry County, which consisted of two contiguous parcels, upon only one of which appellant's residence and outbuildings were located, and in which he and his family resided at the time of the levy. At the sale made by the sheriff under the levy only one parcel was sold and appellee became the purchaser at less than two-thirds of the appraised value of that parcel.
The sheriff reported his actions under the execution and sale made by him, followed by the filing of a paper by appellant styled "Exceptions to Report of Sale." In it he attacked the sale for these reasons: (1) Failure of the sheriff to advertise the sale as required by law; (2) failure to appraise the land sold; (3) that appellant was a housekeeper with a family living on one parcel of the entire tract and he was entitled to a homestead right of the value of $1,000, and (4) that the sheriff did not attempt to appraise or sell the other tract upon which was located appellant's residence.
Appellant filed with such exceptions (as he denominated his complaint) his own affidavits, in which he attempted to support the grounds of his objection to the *Page 583 sale, and in which he set out that he was residing on the unsold parcel of the entire tract with his wife and child; that he never discovered any posted advertisements in the vicinity of the land, nor at the door of the courthouse for the county. Appellee filed in response thereto the affidavit of the deputy sheriff who levied the execution and made the sale, in which there was a flat contradiction of appellant's affidavit with reference to the advertisement of the sale. Appellee also filed the affidavit of one of the appraisers who appraised the parcel sold by the sheriff and in which the affiant stated that he was well acquainted with the two parcels of land owned by appellant and that he and the other appraisers correctly valued the tract sold by the sheriff at $800, and that the other parcel upon which appellant resided was itself worth more than $1,000. The issues so contested were then submitted to the court and the objections and exceptions of appellant were overruled, from which he prosecutes this appeal.
Section 1710 of Baldwin's 1936 Revision of Carroll's Kentucky Statutes (
The only testimony on the issues was made and presented by affidavits, as we have shown, and the only ones filed in behalf of appellant were of his own making. To say the least of it, therefore, there was an issue as to whether the officer performed his duty in properly advertising the sale. The court by overruling appellant's objections thereto necessarily found that the officer had performed his duty in that respect. In addition thereto, *Page 584
section 3760 of Carroll's Statutes (
Section 1702 of Carroll's Statutes (
For the reasons stated, the judgment is affirmed.
