Cavender v. Heirs of Smith

1 Iowa 306
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1 Iowa 306 (Cavender v. Heirs of Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cavender v. Heirs of Smith, 1 Iowa 306 (iowa 1855).

Opinion

Weight, C. J.

Several questions are presented for our adjudication. We regard all of them, however, as subordinate to, and dependent upon, a principal one; and without referring in detail to these minor questions, we shall come at once to consider that which must determine finally the title to this property, and settle the rights of the parties thereto.

That question is, did the sheriff have the power to levy upon and sell this land, and did the plaintiff’s grantor acquire any title thereby, under the circumstances disclosed in this record ? The defendant claims that this land was the homestead of Smith, or that upon which his house or home was chiefly situated; that having, at the time of the levy, other real estate and personal property, the sheriff had no power to levy upon and sell this, without directions from Smith, and that the purchaser could acquire no title thereto. To this plaintiff answers, that granting it to have been his homestead, and that he had personal and other real property, and that Smith gave no direction as to the levy, yet the officer had the power to make such sale; and if he failed to do his duty in the premises, the purchaser’s title cannot be thereby affected, but that such questions are, and must be, between the execution defendant and sheriff.

This property was sold under the act of January 25, 1839. So much of said act as relates to this question, is as follows:

“Section 2. That when hereafter any writ of execution may issue against the goods, chattels, lands, tenements, and hereditaments, of any defendant or defendants, it shall be [339]*339the duty of the sheriff, or other officer, to levy such execution upon such part of the estate of such defendant or defendants, as he, she, or they may direct; but if no such direction shall be given, the messuage, lands, or tenements on which such defendants may be chiefly situated, shall not be levied upon, unless a sufficiency of other property, to satisfy the execution, or executions, in the hands of the officer, •cannot be found; and in all cases, the real estate of execution defendants shall be exempt from levy and sale, until •the personal estate of such defendants shall be first levied upon and sold, unless such defendants shall voluntarily authorize the sale upon execution of their real estate'; Provided, that nothing herein enacted shall be so construed as to make it the duty of any sheriff, or other officer, to levy upon and sell on execution, property selected for that purpose by any’ defendant or defendants, if there exists any reasonable doubt whether such defendant or defendants is, ■or are, the bona fide owners of such property so selected.”

By the act of January 21, 1839, providing for the appointment, and defining -the duties of sheriffs, he is made ■liable on his official bond for any willful neglect of duty. Arid, by another act, passed at the same session, judgments in the District Court were made liens, from the time of their rendition, upon the lands, tenements, and hereditaments of judgment defendants.

We find no case, in the former adjudications of this court, that can afford much assistance in determining this. In Humphrey v. Beeson, 1 G. Greene, 199, it was unnecessary, and the court seems to have so regarded, to examine the effect of irregularities and errors on the part of sheriffs, in relation to such sales. It is there held, however, that a sheriff’s deed is admissible in evidence, although it contains a variance or a mistake in reciting the execution, and in referring to the decree upon which the land was sold; and that under the statute of 1843, which provided that the sheriff, having an execution, should notify the execution defendant of the time and place of sale, if the sheriff omitted the same, -it was not such an irregularity as would justify1 [340]*340tbe setting aside tbe sale. In Hopping v. Burnham, 2 G. Greene, 39, it was decided, tbat a mere omission or irregularity in a sheriff’s return, cannot vitiate a sale made under execution, so as to invalidate tbe right of a bona fide purchaser ; and tbat an imperfect return, or tbe failure to mate any return, cannot prejudice tbe title of such purchaser. In Corriell v. Doolittle, 2 Ib. 385,. tbe plaintiff claimed title under a sheriff’s deed. Tbe sheriff’s return on tbe execution, failed to show tbat tbe execution defendant bad been notified of tbe time and place of tbe sale, under tbe statute of 1843, referred to in Humphrey v. Beeson. In reference to tbat objection, tbe court says, “ tbat without such notice,, tbe sale of property belonging to an execution defendant, residing within this state, would be considered at least irregular, and as between original parties to tbe judgment, would doubtless be deemed sufficient to invalidate tbe sale. Where, however, tbe return was merely silent as to tbe fact of notice, as in tbat case, it was held, tbat such silence did not create a legal presumption against any party, tbat it was not regularly given. And, again, tbat “ tbe principle asserted in tbe books, tbat the validity of a judgment sale, does not depend upon tbe regularity of tbe sheriff’s return, is fully adopted.” In tbe conclusion of tbe case, tbe following dictum is announced: “When tbe party for whose benefit tbe execution was issued, becomes tbe purchaser, be should be held accountable for irregularities which would not afiect a bona fide sale to a third party.

These are all tbe published cases bearing on tbe case at bar. Others may have been made, but our attention has not been directed to them, and we are not aware of any. None of them are strictly analogous; for here- it is conceded tbat tbe judgment and execution were regular, and tbe return of tbe sheriff, and bis deed, are in due form; but it is claimed tbat tbe defendants have a right to go back of tbe levy, sale, return, and deed, and show tbat tbe sheriff bad no power to sell tbe land, under tbe circumstances disclosed. It is true, tbat part of tbe reasoning in tbe case of Corriell v. Doolittle, would go to tbe extent of bolding tbe sale invalid, [341]*341if it appeared, aliunde, tbat such, notice had not been given to the defendant. But such conclusion is not fairly warranted by the whole tenor of the case, and certainly not by the other cases above quoted, and the authorities therein cited. We find nothing in the decisions of this court, then, to conclude the question. We will then refer to the decisions of other tribunals, to see how far we are assisted in giving construction to this statute.

In New York, it has been held, that a sale under execution to a bona fide purchaser, cannot be defeated for error or irregularity in the judgment or execution, or on the ground that no levy was made until after the return day. Jackson v. Roosevelt, 13 Johns. 97. And to sustain this doctrine, Ave are referred to Manning's Case, 8 Coke, 91, as the leading ease. This we have not been able to obtain, and cannot, therefore, speak of it in detail. In Jackson v. Delancy and another, 13 Johns. 537, it was held, that a scire facias to revive a judgment irregularly issued, or an execution issued after a year and a day, without a scire facias, is voidable only, and cannot be called in question in a collateral action, so as to defeat the title of a purchaser under the execution.

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