Beard v. Wilson

52 Ark. 290
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 52 Ark. 290 (Beard v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard v. Wilson, 52 Ark. 290 (Ark. 1889).

Opinions

Hughes, J.

Appeal from Lee Circuit Court.( The appellee filed her complaint, claiming title to and right to possession of land described therein, and alleging that appellant, Beard, was in unlawful possession thereof. As evidence of title she exhibited with her complaint a deed for the land, executed to her on the 29th day of April, 1886, by a commissioner in chancery, who had sold the same under a decree in chancery, in the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, against said Beard, in favor of the Wilson Sewing Machine Company, of Chicago, Ill., which company had purchased the land at the sale by said commissioner, and received a certificate of purchase from him, which it had transferred to the appellee, Henrietta Wilson, and upon which her deed was made. The deed had been approved by the court, and recorded.

Appellees in their answer denied'the ownership and right of possession of the plaintiffs, averred ownership and possession in appellant, Roots, and admitted that Beard was in possession as his tenant. As evidence of his title, Roots exhibited with the answer a deed executed to him for the land, by the Sheriff of Lee County, on the 24th day of September, 1887, based upon a purchase of said land by Roots, on the 6th day of December, 1886, which had been made by said Sheriff pursuant to the judgment and order of said Circuit Court rendered, and made respectively on the 8th day of May, 1886, and the 26th day of October, 1886, in a cause then pending in said court, wherein G. W. Hull, as receiver of the Wilson Sewing Machine Company, of Wallingford, Conn., was plaintiff, and said Wilson Sewing Machine Company, of Chicago, 111., was defendant, in which cause a general attachment was issued on the 25th day of March, 1885, and levied upon the land in controversy on the 25th day of the same month.

Exceptions to the documentary evidence exhibited with the answer of defendants were sustained by the court, upon the1 ground that the Sheriff’s deed filed therewith was executed within one year from the Sheriff’s sale at which appellant, Roots, became the purchaser of the land. Defendant excepted, and declining to plead further, a demurrer to the answer was interposed, in short, upon the record, upon the ground that (since exceptions were sustained to the documentary evidence exhibited with the said answer), it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense to the action. The demurrer was sustained, and defendants excepted and declined to plead further. The court found for the plaintiff, impaneled a jury to assess damages upon the return of their verdict, rendered judgment for the plaintiff for recovery of the land and for damages, to which defendants excepted and appealed.

Did the right of redemption from the chancery sale above referred to exist?

1. Statutes : Extending provisions of by reference. The act'of the General Assembly of the 4th of March, 1875, in reference to the right of redemption from sales under decrees in equity is as follows :

“Section i. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Arkansas, That it was and is the true intent and meaning of sections 2696, 2698, 2699 and 2700 should and does apply to all sales of real estate made and had under and by virtue of decrees of chancery courts, in the same manner as they did to sales under executions at law.”

This act evidently refers to the sections above named of Gantt’s Digest, in reference to the right of redemption from execution sales; otherwise it can have no intelligible meaning or application. The language is ungrammatical, but bad grammar does not vitiate.

Is this act constitutional ?

Section 23, of article 5, of the Constitution of 1868, which is substantially the same as section 23, of article 5, of the Constitution of 1874, declares : “No act shall be revised, amended, or the provisions thereof extended or conferred by reference to its title only, but so much thereof as is revised, amended, extended or conferred, shall be re-enacted and published at length.”

The same provision is a partcf the Constitution of the State of Pennsylvania. In considering the constitutionality of an act of the Legislature of that State, relating to the lien of mechanics and others upon buildings, passed June 17, 1887, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held the act unconstitutional, upon the ground that it undertook to extend and confer the benefits of the acts of 1836 and 1845 to a large class of claimants, which the courts had held not to be within their provisions, by reference to their titles only, without the re-enactment of a single one of the provisions so extended. The court said : “ It would be difficult to imagine a plainer violation of the constitutional provision. Titusville Iron Works v. Keystone Oil Co., 122 Pa., 627. See 14 Hunn., 438; Watkins v. Eureka Springs, 49 Ark., 131.” This is exactly the character of our act of March 4, 1875, which comes within the inhibition contained in the above named section 23, of article 5, of the Constitution, and is void on that account.

2. Redemption: From attachment sales. Does the right of redemption from a sale under a judgment in an attachment suit exist for one year, after the sale, as in case of a technical execution sale?

Section 3067 of Mansfield’s Digest provides, that “when any real estate, or any interest therein, is sold under execucution, the same may be redeemed by the debtor from the purchaser, or his vendees, or the personal representatives of either, within twelve months thereafter.”

It was doubtless the intention of the General Assembly in passing this act to give the right of redemption from sales of real estate under any final process from courts of law. The justice or sound policy of a distinction between technical execution sales and sales made in execution of judgments, in cases where attachments have issued, is not very apparent. It is true that sales under attachments must be reported to and confirmed by the court ordering the same, and in this particular they partake of one of the characteristics of judicial sales.

While it is generally proper to observe even the technical distinctions of the law, yet when to do so would tend to defeat the beneficent purposes of a remedial statute, they ought not to be entertained. In Grubbs v. Ellyson, 23 Ark., 287, Judge Fairchild said : “An attachment is but a preliminary execution, so that a homestead is not subject to an attachment any more than it is to an execution which is final process.”

In ex parte Dingmon, in re Bissel Bros., vol. 9, Law Reports, Equity Cases, 34 Victoria, 618, it is said, that “ an execution is the result of a judgment, which has been recovered in some court of law.”

“An execution is the end and fruit of the law.” Co. Litt., 289. “An execution is the execution of the law according to the judgment.” Coke., 3 Inst., 212.

“ Execution is defined to be the act of carrying into effect the final judgment of a court. The writ, which authorizes the officer so to carry into effect such judgment is also called an •execution.” Lockbridge v. Baldwin, 20 Tex., 306.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ark. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-wilson-ark-1889.