Adams v. Keiser

37 Ky. 208, 7 Dana 208, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 17, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 Ky. 208 (Adams v. Keiser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Keiser, 37 Ky. 208, 7 Dana 208, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 122 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

On the trial of this ejectment, which was brought on the demise of Polly Adams, the title of the lessor was deduced through a sheriff’s sale and deed, made under a judgment and execution in favor of George Adams, against Keisers and others, for two thousand five hundred and eighty six dollars and sixty nine cents damages, and $18 311 costs. The sheriff returned, in substance, that he had levied upon a lot of about four acres of land, at the junction of Hill and Main-cross streets, in the city of Lexington; which, after due advertisement &c., he had sold to the plaintiff in the execution (as the highest bidder,) at the price of two thousand six hundred and sixty seven dollars and seventeen cents, which was ordered as a credit on the execution in full.

The recitals of the deed correspond with the foregoing statement of the execution and return. And, on motion of the defendant, the Court, after inspecting the original execution and return, and causing the sheriff’s commissions to be calculated, whereby it appeared that the price for which the lot was sold, exceeded the true amount due on the execution, by the sum of six and a half cents, instructed the jury that, for this excess, the sale and deed were void, and passed no title, and that they should find for the defendant. A verdict was accordingly found for the-defendant, and a judgment rendered thereon: for the reversal of which, the plaintiff has appealed to this Court — presenting, as the only point for our consideration, the question whether the Circuit Court erred in the instruction above stated.

The statutes subjecting lands to sale under execution ^or ^le satisfaction of debts, do not authorize the sheriff to sell more land than is sufficient to satisfy the exe-[209]*209cation. This limitation upon the authority of the officer, plainly deducible from the objects and intention of the statutes conferring the authority, has been declared and enforced in numerous cases by this Court. Patterson vs. Carneal's Heirs, 3 A. K. Marshall, 618; Knight vs. Applegate’s Heirs, 3 Mon. 338; Pepper vs. The Commonwealth by Thornton, 6 Mon. 30; Davidson vs. McMurtry &c., 2 J. J. Marshall, 68; Carlisle vs. Carlisle, 7 J. J. Marshall, 624; Stover vs. Boswell, 3 Dana, 235; Addison vs. Crow &c., 5 Dana, 277.

A sheriff, having levied a large execution on a valuable town lot, sold the whole of it, for what he supposed to be the precise amount of the execution ; but it was afterwards discovered that, in consequence of a trifling error in calculating what the ex’on amounted to, the lot had been sold for six and a half cents more than enough to satisfy it. There was no evidence or reasonable pre sumption, that any part of the lot would have produced a sufficient sum,or that any more than the true amount of the execution would have been bidfortbewhole; or that the lot could have been so divided as to have left to the debtor a piece of any value: held, that the circumstances of this sale do not show that the sheriff did in fact exceed his authority; that the sale should not ho deemed void for so minute an error — injurious to no party, and is good and valid, so that the title passed by the sheriff’s deed.

In each of the foregoing cases, a sale by the sheriff, of more land than was sufficient for the satisfaction of the judgment and execution, is declared to be an excess of the authority conferred upon him by law; and, in the absence of other sufficient authority, the entire sale was pronounced to be void, because it could not be so split up as to be good for a part and void for the residue* (Patterson vs. Carneal's Heirs &c. Pepper vs. The Commonwealth, supra.) The question now is, whether, under the authority of these cases, or of the general principle which limits the power of the sheriff to the purpose for which it was conferred, the sale under the execution of Adams, was properly declared void by the Circuit Court.

In the examination of all the cases upon this subject, it is to be observed, that not one of them attempts to lay down any general rule for the ascertainment of the fact, that more land has been sold than was necessary for the satisfaction of the execution, and that the facts of each case left no room for doubt that, in that particular case, not only more had been sold than was necessary, but that the excess sold, above the quantity which might have satisfied the debt, was something substantial. In the first case, (3 A. K. Marshall, 618,) the execution was for seventy four dollars and twenty three and a half cents, and the sheriff sold four thousand acres of land, for three hundred and seventy dollars; and in every case it appeared — first, that the excess in the amount of money made by the sale, above the amount [210]*210required and authorized by the execution, was in itself of substantial value, regarded as so much money, and, second, that, estimating the value of the land, either by the sum for which it was sold, or by other evidence, the excess in the amount of money made represented a portion of the land of substantial value, either for use or for sale; and, third, these circumstances or others in the case demonstrated, that the proper amount of money might have been made by a sale of less than the whole quantity, and that less than the whole quantity might have been sold, without material practical injury to either party, and with substantial advantage to the •debtor. In the first case already stated, in which the convenient divisibility of the land is entirely apparent, •the Court- say, if the sheriff had pursued the proper mode in offering the land for sale, “ it is not easy to conjecture that he would not have succeeded in selling less of the land for the sum due on the execution.” They also say that, in offering less than the whole tract, both parts of it should be laid off in convenient form. Without stating all the cases, it is sufficient to say that, most of them related to sales of considerable tracts of land in the country, where it was obvious from the .number of acres sold, that, so far as quantity was concerned, a convenient division might be made, in parts proportioned to the true amount of the debt, and the excess, and in other respects, no obstacle to such a division appeared. The two cases of Stover vs. Boswell, 3 Dana 232, and Addison &c. vs. Crow &c., 5 Dana 271, relate to the sale of town lots.

In the first of these cases, (where a house and lot were sold for two hundred and five dollars, under an execution for only one hundred and thirty four dollars and thirty five cents,) it was expressly proved, that the lot was conveniently divisible, and that a part “ which would have commanded the debt, could have been stricken off without injury to the balance;” and on this account, the Court say, “ there was the less excuse for attempting to sell the whole.” In the other case, under an execution for about four hundred and sixty three dollars, two adjoining lots in the town of Hardinsburg [211]*211were sold together for the sum of one thousand seven hundred dollars: and the Court say, “ More land having been sold than was necessary to satisfy the execution, and no circumstance connected with the condition of the property being shown, which justified the sale of the whole together, the sale was unauthorized” &c.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ky. 208, 7 Dana 208, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-keiser-kyctapp-1838.