Clarkson v. Read

15 Va. 288
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Va. 288 (Clarkson v. Read) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarkson v. Read, 15 Va. 288 (Va. 1859).

Opinion

DANUSH, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In the case of Casamajor v. Strode, 1 Coud. Eng. Ch. R. 195, the broad doctrine is laid down by the vice chancellor, Sir John Beach, that a purchaser, under a decree for the sale of lands, though not a party to the cause, does, by the act of purchase, submit himself to the jurisdiction of the court as to all matters connected with that character. The same doctrine is stated by Judge Story in the case of Wood v. Mann, 3 Sumner’s R. 318, and by Chancellor Walworth in the case of Requa v. Rea, 2 Paige’s R. 341. And in the second volume of Daniel’s Ch. Pr. 1460-61-2, it is stated, that after the report of a sale by a master is confirmed, there are, according to the English practice, three modes of remedying the failure of the purchaser to comply with the terms of the sale. If it appears that the purchase hás been made bj a person unable to perform his contract, the parties interested in the sale, may, upon motion, obtain an order, simply discharging him from his purchase, and . directing the estate to be resold. If the purchaser is responsible, the court will, if required, make an order that he shall within a given time pay the money into court; and if the purchaser, on being served with the order, fails to obey it, his submission to it may be enforced by attachment. Or an order will be made for the estate to be resold, and for the purchaser to pa3r the expenses arising from the non-completion of the purchase and the resale, and *any deficiency in price arising upon the second sale. Such an order (the author proceeds) was made by Lord Cottingham in Harding v. Harding, 18 Eng. Ch. R. 514, after consultation with the other judges of the court; and although in that case the purchaser was a defendant in the cause, it does not seem that that fact was considered as necessary in order to justify the making of the order.

In Lansdown v. Elderton, 14 Ves. R. 512, the purchaser was compelled to complete his purchase by the second of the courses just mentioned, namely, by an order to pay in his purchase money within a given period, or stand committed. Since the date of that decision (1808-) it has been the constant practice of the English courts of chancery to make such orders; and repeated instances may be found in the reports of our sister states, in which the precedent has been approved and acted upon. Anderson v. Foulke, 2 Harr. & Gill R. 346; Gordon v. Sims, 2 McCord’s Ch. R. 151; Brasher v. Cortlandt, 2 John. Ch. R. 505.

It is argued, however, bj' the counsel for the appellant, that as judicial sales in England are always made for cash, the practice regulating such sales there has no application to cases where, bj' the terms of the decree, the sale is upon a credit, and the pajnnent of the purchase money is to be secured by the bond of the purchaser. And in support of this view, he cites the case of Richardson v. Jones, 3 Gill & John. R. 163, in which it was held by the Court of appeals of Maryland, that where a bond is given to the trustee, for the purchase money under an order of sale in chancery, requiring a bond to be given, and the sale has been confirmed, the purchaser and his sureties cannot be compelled to pay the bond by attachment. Buchanan, Ch. J., thus states the reasons why, in his opinion, the practice in respect to sales on credit should be different from that in respect [825]*825to sales for cash. “When a sale *is made under a decree or order in chancery, and no bond or security is given for the payment of the purchase money, a practice has grown up in chancery, and sanctioned by this court, in Anderson v. Foulke, 2 Harr. & Gill 346, to compel the purchaser to complete his purchase by an order on him in a summary way to pay or bring the money into court, and that, from a necessity arising out of the peculiar character of such transactions. No action at law will lie to enforce a decree in chancery •within the territorial jurisdiction of the court in chancery. An order of the Court of chancery ratifying such a sale is considered as amounting to a decree for the payment of the money; and if that court could not enforce the execution of it, it could not be enforced at all.” “A court of chancery having a clear right to enforce its own decrees, and an order of ratification being considered as amounting to a decree for the payment of the purchase money, a purchaser who neglects or refuses to comply with such decree, is in contempt, and may be dealt with accordingly by an order in the first instance (in this state) to bring the money into court as preparatory to an attachment.” “But where a bond is given to the trustee for the purchase money under an order of sale from chancery requiring bond to be given, the terms of sale are complied with, and a contract entered into, not with the court, but with the trustee, on which, after ratification, he has a full' and perfect remedy at law for enforcing the payment of the purchase money, that is recognized and sanctioned by the order of ratification, which, in such case, is not a decree for the payment of the purchase money, but a confirmation only of what has been done. And though the contract of sale being perfected by the order of ratification, it is thereby said to become a sale by the court; yet the terms of sale being complied with and *the purchase completed, by giving to the trustee, as required, a bond to secure the purchase money, the purchaser is not in contempt by the non-payment of it. The contract on the bond not being with the court, but with the trustee under the sanction of the court, the remedy is by suit on the bond in a court of law ; and chancery cannot enforce it as a mere bond for tlie payment of money, by which the original simple contract of purchase is extinguished. And if the payment of the bond, as such, cannot be enforced by a bill in chancery, a fortiori, can it not be enforced in a summary wray by an order to bring the money into court.”

However satisfactory such reasoning may seem when the effort is to enforce the payment of the purchase money by attachment, I do not perceive how it can be made to bear on the case in hand. By the decree under which the purchase in this case was made, the terms of sale were, one-fourth of the purchase money for cash, and as to the residue, upon a credit of one, two and three years, payable by equal installments, the purchaser giving bond with security for payment of the deferred installments, and the title of the land to be retained as security for the payment of such deferred installments, until the same shall be fully paid. All of the bonds for the deferred installments were due and unpaid, and judgments at law' upon two of them had proved unproductive. And in this state of things, the proceeding against the purchaser asked and obtained, was not a proceeding by way of attachment, but a rule summoning him to appear to show cause why the land sold him by the commissioners should not be resold to pay the unsatisfied installments of purchase money due by him and his securities; and why a decree over should not be rendered against him for so much of said unpaid purchase money as the said land, upon a resale, might not pay off *and discharge. And the interlocutory decree, from which the appeal is had, is simply a decree for the resale of the land.

Bet it be that there is no decree in the cause ordering Clarkson to pay in the purchase money, and that so, he cannot strictly be treated as in contempt; still, the credit which was allowed having expired, and his bonds being wholly unpaid, he is in default in respect to the purchase money. Having by his purchase submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court in the suit, he has not placed himself beyond the reach of the court by giving the bonds.

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15 Va. 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarkson-v-read-va-1859.