Campbell v. Moseby

16 Ky. 358, 1821 Ky. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 10, 1821
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ky. 358 (Campbell v. Moseby) 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
Campbell v. Moseby, 16 Ky. 358, 1821 Ky. LEXIS 31 (Ky. Ct. App. 1821).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court, by

Judge Owsley.

ON the 17th of July 1810, Campbell executed an obligation, therein reciting that he had sold to Thomas Arthur a tract of land containing 185 acres, lying in the county of Christian, and binding himself to transfer the same, and guarantee the title thereof, to any person the said Arthur might direct.

Some time thereafter, Arthur purchased of Moseby a quantity of merchandize, and to secure the payment thereof, mortgaged to Moseby the 185 acre tract, together with various other tracts. Under the mortgage, [359]*359and in a suit between Arthur and Moseby, the land was sold by a decree of the court, and Moseby became the purchaser, and received from commissioners, appointed under the decree, a transfer of Campbell’s interest in the land.

The patent in such case will transfer the legal title to the obligor, subject (as respects purchasers under execution with notice,) to all the equity which the obligee could claim against the obligor. As, in such case, the obligor could not himself lawfully sell to a general creditor with notice, after the emanation of the patent the legal title discharged of the equity, it cannot, under the words of the act of assembly, be so transferred by sheriff’s sale. As bonds for the conveyance of land are not required to be recorded, this case is not affected by the act regulating conveyances.

Subsequent to this, a patent issued from the commonwealth to Campbell, for the land, (he having, at the time of his sale to Arthur, but an inchoate title under a county court certificate and survey made thereon,) and in virtue of an execution which issued against Campbell and the Bradleys, who were his securities, the sheriff exposed the 185 acre tract to sale, and the Bradleys became the purchasers, &c.

Moseby then exhibited his bill in equity, asserting his equity under the obligation given by Campbell to Arthur, and through the mortgage given by Arthur to him, and the decree and sale made in the suit between him and Arthur. The bill, after setting forth the equity of Moseby, charges the Bradleys with notice thereof before they purchased under the execution against Campbell; and after making Campbell and the Bradleys defendants, prays for a decree compelling them to surrender the legal title, &c.

The Bradleys express an ignorance of the various circumstances through which Moseby asserts his equity, and put him on the proof thereof. They admit that they were informed of his claim before they made the purchase; but insist that as the legal title to the land was in Campbell at the time of the sale by the sheriff, it was liable to be sold under the execution, and that equity ought not to disturb their purchase made thereunder, &c.

The court below decreed the Bradleys to relinquish their claim derived under the sheriff’s sale, and directed Campbell to convey the title to Moseby, in accordance to the stipulations in his obligation to Arthur. To reverse that decree, Campbell and the Bradleys have prosecuted this writ of error.

The cause was formerly heard by this court, and as the record then contained no evidence of Moseby’s equity, the decree of the court below was reversed, by an opinion then delivered by this court. But it being suggested by the counsel of Moseby, that there was diminution in the record, a re-hearing of the cause was directed, and a writ of certiorari awarded, directing the [360]*360clerk of the court below to supply the alleged defect, by transmitting to this court a full and complete transcript of the record in that court. The certiorari has accordingly been returned, and from the record now before the court, Moseby is shown to have had, at the time the Bradleys purchased from the sheriff, an unquestionable equitable right to the land. The equity is shown to have passed to Arthur by the bond given to him by Campbell; and the transcript of the proceedings in the suit between Arthur and Moseby, shows that by a decree in that cause the interest which Arthur acquired under the obligation of Campbell, was sold and tranferred to Moseby, by commissioners appointed by the court. It is true, that neither Campbell nor the Bradleys appear to have been parties to that suit; but the decree and proceedings thereunder are conclusive against Arthur, and that which is conclusive against him, is evidently competent to show that the equity which he held has thereby passed to Moseby.

Assuming, therefore, the equity asserted by Moseby to be sufficiently established, the question occurs, whether or not the Bradleys can protect themselves against that equity, by their purchase from the sheriff under the execution which issued against Campbell, &c. If they had purchased and obtained a title from Campbell, without notice of the equity of Moseby, it is not pretended that they would not hold the title subject to that equity; but as they purchased from an officer of the law, under a regular process, it was contended in argument that their situation is more favorable, and their interest derived under the purchase ought not to be overreached by the prior equity of Moseby.

The principle is not, however, perceived, by which the purchase made by the Bradleys can protect them against the equity of Moseby. If they could be protected, something favorable to such an idea might be expected to be found in the provisions of the law subjecting lands to sale under executions in satisfaction of debts. But those provisions contain nothing from which such an inference can, on any rational principle of construction, be deduced. According to those provisions, the lands, tenements and hereditaments of the defendant, whether in possession, reversion or remainder, may, no doubt, be sold in satisfaction of judgments, under writs of fieri facias; and the officer making the [361]*361sale is required to convey the estate sold to the purchaser. But the conveyance, when made by the officer, instead of operating to pass any interest which others, not party to the judgment or execution, may have in the lands, is, by the sixth section of the act of 1792, (1 Litt. 130-1,) declared to be effectual for passing to the purchaser all the estate and interest which the debtor had, and might lawfully part with, in the lands. Now, if the conveyance which the officer makes of lands sold under execution, is barely effectual to pass to the purchaser the estate and interest which the debtor has, and may lawfully part with, it is impossible to conceive how the purchase made by the Bradleys, under the execution against Campbell, can protect them against the equity of Moseby; for that equity was created before the emanation of the execution, existed in Moseby at the time of sale, and could not have then been lawfully disposed of by Campbell to any other person. If the Bradleys, under their purchase, had obtained a conveyance from the officer before they were informed of Moseby's equity, there would be a propriety in refusing relief to Moseby; for the legal title which Campbell held, at the sale, was liable to the execution, and would pass by the officer’s deed, and equity will never compel the holder of the legal title, under a purchase for a valuable consideration without notice, to surrender it to the holder of a latent equity. But, in this case, the Bradleys must be admitted to have had notice of Moseby’s equity when they purchased, and, as all other purchasers with notice, must hold the land subject to that equity.

1 Dig. 312

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Ky. 358, 1821 Ky. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-moseby-kyctapp-1821.