Beall v. Barclay

49 Ky. 261, 10 B. Mon. 261, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 14, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 49 Ky. 261 (Beall v. Barclay) 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
Beall v. Barclay, 49 Ky. 261, 10 B. Mon. 261, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 86 (Ky. Ct. App. 1850).

Opinion

Judge Geaham

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees, complainants in the Circuit Court, by proper allegations in their bill, obtained an attachment, on a tract of five hundred and eighty-one acres, and one of twenty-nine acres of land, the property of Harrison, to satisfy a debt which Harrison, with other obligors, who are insolvent, owed to them. The bill was filed and process issued thereon, on the 6th January, 1844. Several executions had previously issued against Harrison’s estate, and were then in the hands of the Sheriff. After process had been served on Harrison, he in February afterwards sold and conveyed to Sasseen two hundred and twenty-eight acres of the land. The greater portion of the sum paid.by Sasseen was applied to payment and satisfaction of these executions.

Barclay and Ryan, at the March term 1844, obtained a judgment at law against Harrison, execution issued upon it, which together wih some seven or eight other executions were levied on the land attached, and at April 1844, the land was sold and Beall became the purchaser at the price of $120. In June afterwards, these executions having been levied on Harrison’s equity of redemption in the land, it was sold, and Beall became the purchaser for the sum of $2200 25. The aggregate amount of these sales being divided pro rata among the several executions, that of Barclay and Ryan was credited by $620 63, leaving more' than half [262]*262their demand yet unpaid. By an amended bill, Sasseen and Beall were made defendants, and because their respective purcháses had been made pendente lite, a decree was sought to sell the land for the residue of the debt, and on a final hearing the Court so decreed. Various errors have been assigned by Beall and Sasseen, the former having appealed from and the latter prosecuting a writ of error to the decree.

'Where two .chancery attachments are obtained the complainant in the bill for the second attachment is a competent witness for complainant in the .first. ¡Copies of notes in the hands of a ■third person who .can be required to produce them are not competent evidence. The statement of a vendor after he has passed his. title are not evidence against vendee.

It is not necessary to notice these errors in detail. The proof in the cause justified, as we believe, the issuing of the attachment. Boyd having also obtained an attachment in Chancery, which had been levied on this land or a part of it, was used as a witness for complainants. The Court overruled an objection to his competency, and we suppose rightly done so. He was not a party to this suit, and its decision in favor of the complainants could not promote his interest. The objections against him were to his credibility atid not to his competency as a witness.

It was not proper to permit the copies of the two notes of Beall to be read as evidence. They were in the hands of a third person who could have been compelled to produce them on the trial had their production been necessary, but as Beall substantially admits the facts which these copies conduce to prove, their admission as evidence did him no injury.

The statements of a vendor made after he has conveyed his title, are not evidence against his vendee. Besides the deed made to Beall by the Sheriff, Harrison had also conveyed to him afterwards. Harrison’s subsequent statements, so far as they affected the interest of Beall, should have been execluded. These are, however, all minor and unimportant points in this controversy, which mainly turns on the facts already stated, taken in connection with the following. It is proved that Barclay, one of the complainants was present at the last sale, and was himself a bidder. The Sheriff, at the time of making the sale, gave public notice that attachments had been levied on the land. It is proved by Hays and others, that Hays, as the lawyer of Boyd. [263]*263and as the advertiser of Barclay, gave, at the time, public notice of the pendency of these attachments in Chancery, that they would overreach the Sheriff’s sale, and that the purchaser would buy, subject to these attachments. It is also proved by Hays that whilst the sale was going on, Beall, in a private conversation, stated in substance that he knew of the pendency of the attachments.

Though a mortgagee who stands by at a sale of the mortgaged property and does not assert it and receivelheseproceeds of the sale will be estopped thereafter to assert it, (4 B. Monroe, 531) yet it is not so where the lien was acquired on the property by attachment iri chancery. (3 B~ Monroe 133; 580.)

In view of the facts stated, it is'now insisted that the levy of the complainant’s execution on the land, and one of them being a bidder at the sale, was virtually a waiver of the lien previously acquired by their attachment in Chancery. The case of Waller vs Tate, (4 B. Mon. 531,) is cited in support of this position. That was the case of a mortgage. The equity of redemption in the property mortgaged was not the subject of sale for the debt secured by the mortgage. The land was sold in the usual terms without any reference to mortgage or equity of redemption. It was a sale of the land for the mortgage debt, and an application of the proceeds to its satisfaction. Such a sale could only be effectual by the actual or presumed surrender of the mortgage title. It was, therefore, determined that as the mortgagee directed and sanctioned the sale,-received the proceeds and did not object to or quash the sale, his conduct implied an admission of title in the mortgagor, and an abandonment of any inconsistent title in himself, “and preclude him in a Court of Equity from setting up the mortgage against the purchaser.” This case is essentially different. It is that of a lien- acquired not by mortgage, but by attachment in Chancery. In the case of Oldham vs Scrivener, (3 B. Mon. 580,) where Oldham and others had levied attachments in Chancery on Scrivener’s land, and afterwards Old-ham having obtained a judgment at law, caused an execution on his judgment to be levied on the land attached, purchased it himself and procured the Sheriff’s deed, it was held that the proceeding was not unauthorized or illegal because of the prior levy and pendency of the proceedings in Chancery. The Court say. [264]*264“thé legal title is not changed or divested out of th'e debtor by the penden'ey of the Chancery suit or the levy of the attachment, but an equitable control only over the subject has been acquired, which will enable the Chancellor to overreach any intermediate transfers of the property, so far as may be necessary to accomplish the objects of the' proceeding in his tribunal. The title still remains in the debtor, and may be sold or conveyed. The purchaser acquires the debtor’s title, stands in his place, subject as it was before in the debtor’s hands which had attached in favor of the complainants in the Chancery suits,” Same principle virtually settled in (3 B. Monroe, 133.)

A purchaser of property at a sale under execution, which is under attachment to satisfy the same debt, where the decree subjects it to the attachment debt, Should be re-imbursed out of the attached property to the extent of the payment made upon the execution.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ky. 261, 10 B. Mon. 261, 1850 Ky. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beall-v-barclay-kyctapp-1850.