Atkison v. Murfree

1 Tenn. Ch. R. 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 51 (Atkison v. Murfree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkison v. Murfree, 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 51 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1872).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

In this suit, brought for the purpose of foreclosing a deed of trust made for the benefit of creditors and winding up an insolvent estate, a house and lot in Nashville were sold by the master, under order of the court, at public sale, and bid off by a purchaser at $8,900, who has complied with the terms of the sale by executing his notes, with good security, for the purchase-money, as required by the decree of sale. The cause is before me upon the proposition of a third person to advance the bid to $10,500, or about 18 per cent., bond, with good security, being executed to the clerk and master, in the penalty of $15,000, conditioned to start the biddings, if reopened, ai the price of advance offered. The purchaser at the master’s sale appears by his counsel and resists the application, and the questions involved have been ably argued.

The argument against the opening of the biddings starts out with the assumption that the authorities, in this state, are uniform, that something more is required than a mere advance on the price bid to justify the opening of the bid-dings in chancery sales. For this position the counsel cites Owen v. Owen, 5 Hum. 352; Donaldson v. Young, 7 Hum. 266; Morton v. Sloan, 11 Hum. 280; Childress v. Hurt, 2 Swan, 490; Johnson v. Quarles, 4 Cold. 615; and Newland v. Gaines, 1 Heisk. 720. And he might have added Houston v. Aycock, 5 Sneed, 406, and other cases. But an examination of these, and other authorities in this state, shows that the decisions and dicta are far from uniform, and that our courts have been reluctant to lay down the rule that a mere advance was sufficient, while they have often seized upon slight circumstances, of an intangible and unsatisfactory character, in connection with the advance, to do what the manifest equity of the case demanded, and reopen the biddings. In the [53]*53conflict of authority and dicta to be found in our own books upon the precise point now before me, the safest course seems to be to ascertain the principles which underlie the actual decisions, and follow them.

In England, the uniform ruling of the Court of Chancery has been that the bidder before the master acquires no right in the property until the sale has been confirmed. In other words, there is no binding contract of sale until the court has, by confirming the master’s report, accepted the bid. The consequence is that until confirmation the bidder assumes no risk. If the property be destroyed by fire, or is deteriorated in value by any other casualty, the loss does not fall upon him. So, he has the right until confirmation to find out whether there have been any misrepresentations made in regard to the property, or whether there are any flaws in the title. As a counterpoise to these advantages, the court, for the benefit of its suitors-, considered itself at liberty to receive advances on the bid, and to open the biddings if the advance would justify the act. The amount of advance necessary to accomplish this result has been fluctuating, and, perhaps, has never been rigidly fixed either in gross or in percentage by a positive rule to be applied to every case. The rule has been flexible and varied with the circumstances. Ten per cent, was at one time considered to be a proper minimum, but five per cent, has been received. The sum of £40 seems to have been recognized as the minimum in any case. 2 Dan. Ch. Pr. 1285 ; 1 Sug. Vend. 163.

In Ireland, a deposit of five per cent, advance and the payment of former purchaser’s costs, will always open bid-dings, provided the total advance amounts to £40. Aubrey v. Denny, 2 Moll. 508; Leland v. Griffith, 2 Moll. 510.

Chancellor Kent, clarum et venerabile nomen, at an early day, laid down the rule, which seems to have been adhered to in New York, that, at a master’s sale, a binding contract is made as soon as the hammer is down, and that the purchaser is at once entitled to all the rights which are conceded in England only after confirmation. The consequence of [54]*54tbis rule, carried to its logical result, is that from the moment the hammer of the auctioneer falls, all the risks of ownership follow, and that, as the property becomes the purchaser’s, the circumstances necessary to open .the bid-dings must be such as would afford good ground for equitable relief in contracts between individuáis. Mr. Hoffman, in his Practice of Masters in Chancery, page 224, does not hesitate to condemn the reasoning upon which the conclusion is sought to be based, and it does not seem to have been adopted to its full extent by the courts of other states of the Union. Our own Court has expressly repudiated it. Owen v. Owen, 5 Hum. 352; Morton v. Sloan, 11 Hum. 278; Childress v. Hurt, 2 Swan, 487.

There is no conflict in our authorities, so far as sales of land are concerned, that the sale is not complete nor binding on the purchaser until confirmation. There is some conflict on this point in regard to sales of personalty, the usage in this state having been to deliver the property at the time of sale. Polk v. Pledge, 5 Cold. 384; Newman v. Sloan, 5 Cold. 390; Graves v. Keaton, 3 Cold. 8. But the latest decision relating to sales of personalty seems to restore the symmetry of the law, and makes the title depend on confirmation. Johnson v. Johnson, 2 Heisk. 521. But see Saunders v. Stallings, 5 Heisk. 65.

As a result of the rule in regard to sales of realty, it has been held that a purchaser may be released from his purchase, where the value of the property has been depreciated by the destruction of buildings by fire between the sale and confirmation. Graves v. Keaton, 3 Cold. 8. So, in Wood v. Morgan, 4 Hum. 372, a tender of money, for the redemption of real estate, sold under decree of the Chancery Court, made before the sale was confirmed was held to be premature. The purchaser, too, is entitled to rent only from confirmation. Armstrong v. McClure, 4 Heisk. 80. Anda sale of the realty of an infant or married woman does not work a conversion until confirmation. Jones v. Walkup, 5 Sneed, 135; Moore, ex parte, 3 Head, 171; Rogers v. Clark, 1 Sneed, 665.

[55]*55Under these circumstances the remark of McKinney, J., in Childress v. Hurt, 2 Swan, 491, seems to be well warranted : “ The course of decisions on this subject,” he says, “ has conformed rather to the English practice, than to that of some of the American courts,” referring especially to Chancellor Kent’s views, 4 Kent Com. 192. This language is repeated with approbation by the court in Eakin & Co. v. Herbert, 4 Cold. 119.

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Related

Johnson v. Johnson
49 Tenn. 521 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1871)
Saunders v. Stallings
52 Tenn. 65 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1871)
Click v. Burris
53 Tenn. 539 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. Ch. R. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkison-v-murfree-tennctapp-1872.