Bowker v. Semple

6 R.I. Dec. 4
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 18, 1929
DocketEq. No. 7969
StatusPublished

This text of 6 R.I. Dec. 4 (Bowker v. Semple) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowker v. Semple, 6 R.I. Dec. 4 (R.I. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

BAKER, J.

Final hearing.

In this case the complainant is seeking to have a certain sheriff’s deed, covering four lots of land with improvements thereon situated in Crans-ton, declared void. This property formerly belonged to the complainant and .prior to the sale, he and others became joint makers of a certain note which was not paid at maturity. Suit on this note was brought by the holder thereof and no question is raised by complainant as to the validity of the judgment or the issuance of the execution under which the sale in question was held. Neither is any claim of fraud made in the pleadings or by the evidence.

It appears that the sheriff’s sale in question was held March 6, 1926, the deed being recorded March 20th. The purchaser at the execution sale conveyed to another on May 21st of the same year, and thereafter, through a series of mesne conveyances, the property came into the hands of one Mello by deed dated June 25, 1926. On May 22,1926, a first mortgage for $3,000 was given on the property by the Old Colony Co-operative Bank, and later a second mortgage for $550 was placed upon the premises by one Berry. The Old Colony Co-operative Bank and one Conroy, a grantee of the property and who was acting in the capacity of agent for one Le Lacheure, intervened and became parties to the case. On or about June 19, 1926, a notice of lis pendens was recorded on behalf of the complainant. It is clear, therefore, that the last conveyance from Berry to Mello, dated June 25, 1926, is not involved in this proceeding, the parties having constructive notice of this claim.

The complainant first urges that the sale by the sheriff should be declared void because he sold four lots of land with improvements thereon en masse to satisfy the judgment claim of a few hundred dollars.

The Court has unquestionably held that an officer of the State selling property has duties to perform to the debtor as well as to the creditor. He must not allow his acts in making the sale to be a means of abuse or oppression.

Aldrich vs. Wilcox, 10 R. I. 405.

In this particular case, however, there is no clear testimony on the part of the complainant showing that the property could have been divided or that the lots could have been sold separately and the Court is not informed as to the location on the premises of the improvements. After careful consideration, the Court is of the opinion that in this matter the officer acted reasonably under all the circumstances and that the deed should not be declared void on this ground.

The complainant next contends that the notices of. the sale were improperly posted. The law calls for a posting in three public places. The testimony shows that one notice was placed in a store in ICnightsville in Cranston and the other two notices were placed in the City Hall in Cranston, not far from said store, one notice being downstairs in the city clerk’s office and the other upstairs just outside the room used by the Eighth District Court. All three of these postings were at a considerable distance from the complainant’s property.

23 Corpus Juris 838.

Eurther, the fact, as appears in the case at bar, that postings have been made in the same general manner for a considerable period of years should, in the judgment of the Court, be given some consideration. The object of the posting is, of course, to give notice of the sale.

Horton vs. Bassett, 16 R. I. 419.

The Court is of the opinion that it might have been better judgment to post one of these notices in the neigh-borhod of the complainant’s property rather than to place two of them in the City Hall. At the same time, it should be borne in mind that notices of this ts'pe can not well be placed out of doors owing to weather conditions and it is not always easy to obtain permission to post in buildings. As far as the store in Knightsville is concerned, the Court believes this to be a, public place within the meaning of the statute. The evidence showed that many persons entered the store'every day, that the notices were looked at and that for many years the sheriff’s office had used this place for posting.

See Wilcox vs. Emerson, 10 R. I. 270.

After due consideration the Court also finds that the posting in the City Hall was proper. The notices were in places where different types of business were transacted and where large numbers of people were likely to go or to congregate. The Court is of the opinion, therefore, that the deed in question is not void by reason of the manner in which the notices relating to the sale were posted.

,. The complainant also argues that .the property was sold for such a grossly inadequate consideration as to be unconscionable. It appears from the evidence that the property was bought for $1 at the execution sale by one ■representing the judgment creditor. The assessed value in 1925 was 81,240 and from testimony introduced at the bearing it would appear that the actual market value of the property was between $4,000 and $4,500. It is unquestionably the law that in sales of this type mere inadequacy of price alone is not sufficient to render the sale void or to set the deed aside. It is equally well settled, however, that if any other extenuating facts or circumstances are combined with the gross inadequacy of price, then the Court will aot to give the complainant relief.

Boiani vs. Wilson & Pettey, 47 R. I. 317;

McKenney vs. Burney, et al., 143 Atl. 778.

In this particular case there can be no question made as to the gross inadequacy of the consideration and there are, perhaps, certain other facts which properly could be taken into consideration in giving the complainant relief. He was a man over 70 years of age, not particularly well educated or versed in business matters. He signed the note upon which the judgment was obtained as an accommodation for another, he himself receiving nothing from the proceeds of the note. If the property was now in the hands of the purchaser at the execution sale or the first two grantees from him-who in the opinion of the Court can not properly be called bona fide purchasers for value without notice because they clearly purchased the property as a speculation and with a certain amount of notice of the situation —then the Court might be in a position to aid the complainant, but, unfortunately for him, the case as developed by the evidence does not rest here.

The respondents Conroy and the Old Colony Co-operative Bank are certainly purchasers for value and, unless the mere fact of the recording of the sheriff’s sale showing a consideration of $1 could be construed as notice, it would seem to the Court that they [6]*6stand in the position of bona fide purchasers without notice of any equity in the complainant.

Further, a consideration of the evidence in the case reveals that the complainant’s situation is largely of his own making. This, in the opinion of the Court, .is the most difficult point for him to overcome.

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Related

McKenney v. Burney
143 A. 778 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
6 R.I. Dec. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowker-v-semple-risuperct-1929.