Cooper v. Martin

31 Ky. 23, 1 Dana 23, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 3, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 Ky. 23 (Cooper v. Martin) 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
Cooper v. Martin, 31 Ky. 23, 1 Dana 23, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 8 (Ky. Ct. App. 1833).

Opinion

Judge Nicholas

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

McDade mortgaged to Martin two lots of ground, to indemnify him as his surety in a note to the Bank of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and also in a note for a smaller amount to a third person.

Judgment having been obtained on the latter, against McDade and Martin, an execution which issued thereon, was levied on the two lots, and the interest of both Me-Dade and Martin therein sold by the sheriff to Cooper, at a price much beyond the amount due on the execution.

By an arrangement between McDade, Cooper and Gentry, previous to the sale, it was agreed that Cooper should become the purchaser of the two lots, at the sheriff’s sale, that Cooper and Gentry should release McDade from debts which he severally owed them, and which with the amount due on the execution, was to be in fulD [24]*24payment of the lots. This arrangement was made on the part of Cooper and Gentry, for the purpose of securing the debts due them by McDade, he being insolvent. Immediately after the sale, Cooper was put in possession of the lots, and still retains it.

Bill for foreclosure; decree and Sale. ' Bill, by tire purchaser-under the execution, in possession. Sale, by sheriff, 'of two lots— for more than the amount óf the execution, is illegal. Interest oCmorl gagee is not vendible under execution. . Mortgagor having agreed that the premises should bé sold under execution, the purchaser acquired his equitable right.

[24]*24After the sheriff’s sale, Martin'filed his bill against Mc-Dade and Gentry, averring that Gentry had become the purchaser of the equity of redemption, and after due service of process upon both, obtained a decree of foreclosure and order of sale, became the purchaser of the lots, for a small sum, at the commissioner’s sale, had his purchase confirmed, and an habere, facias awarded him.

Cooper then filed his hill with injunction against the habere facias, denying any notice of the pendency of Martin’s suit; praying to be quieted in his possession; that Martin might be made to release his title to him, and for such other relief as he might be entitled to.

Martin, by his answer in the nature of a cross-bill, resisted Cooper’s equity;set up and relied upon the decree of foreclosure and sale under his mortgage, in har thereof ; but in case the court should deem Cooper entitled to relief, then praying a reforecloslire and sale, and claiming in that event, a priority, not only in his own favor for one-third of the bank debt paid by him, but also in favor of Churchill and Beeler, his co-sureties therein, for the other two-thirds paid by them, and to that end brought them before the Court.

They answered, claiming the lien and priority asserted for them by Martin.

- On final hearing the court treated the whole purchase of Cooper as null and void, dissolved his injunction, and dismissed his bill.

As the lots were sold together," and not separately, with-, out the privity or assent of Martin; as the sheriff exceeded his authority, in selling for more than the amount due on the execution, and as the interest of Martin was not vendible at all under execution, the court certainly did right in treating the sale of his interest as a mere nullity. But the mode of sale having been the result of an express agreement on the part of McDade, for the purpose of selling and transferring in that way his equi[25]*25ty of redemption, it is equally clear, the sale should be. deemed sufficient to give Cooper at least the equitable right thereto. The only reason, therefore, for the absolute dismissal of his bill, without affording him any relief, must be that, the decree of foreclosure and sale have barred Cooper’s right, Martin net having, as is contended, any notice thereof at the institution of his suit, or at the time of obtaining his decree.

Junior incum-brancers.known to the senior mortgagee, should be parties to his bill for a foreclosure. The holder of the junior mortgage, or incum-brance, or of the equity of redemption, is' not hound by a decree of foreclosure to which he was no party — and will be allowed to redeem the estate —although the senior mortgagee had no notice of such claim.

From facts and circumstances not necessary to be detailed, we should have little hesitation in denying to Martin, the attitude claimed for him, of not having had notice of Cooper’s purchase, if he had been charged with it, or the fact had been put in issue. But as this has not been done, wc shall waive the consideration of the question, whether he is entitled to be so treated, inasmuch as the result, in our opinion, will be the same whether he had notice or not.

All the authorites agree that where a mortgagee, 'at the time of filing his bill, has notice of a junior mortgage, or other subsequent incumbrance, he is bound to make the holder thereof a party to the suit, or the proceedings therein will not affect him. But where he has no such notice, it has been deemed by some, an undue degree of hardship, to compel him to grope the world over in pursuit of secret incumbrances, under the penalty of render* ing his foreclosure liable to be opened at a distant day, to let in the right of redemption of one whose claim could not have been ascertained by reasonable search or enquiry. Coventry’s Pow. 306, n. G — 551, n. S — 989, n. C — The law, however, has been authoritatively settled, that he must incur this hardship. In the case of Haines vs. Beach, 3 John. Chy. 459, all the English cases, ancient and modern, are collated, and Chancellor Kent comes to the just conclusion, that in England the rule has been well settled, that the subsequent purchasers or incumbrancers must be parties, or the decree will not bind their rights. He conceives the necessity, for making the subsequent incumbrancers parties, or holding their rights unimpaired, to be much stronger and more indispensable to justice under the Ncw-York practice, similar to that of this state, because the mortgagor would [26]*26take the surplus money, after the sale of the mortgage property, and thus be enabled and tempted to commit a fraud, by not disclosing the subsequent incumbrances. “But,” says he, “their rights cannot be destroyed in this way; the purchaser will take only a title as against the-fardes to the suit, a'nd he cannot set it up against the subsisting eqxxity of those who are not parties.” We concur with him, that “ this is the necessary doctrine resulting from the cases.” But we cannot see, as he does, the additional force, the doctrine derives from the difference of practice in this country and England, between an order'of sale, and simple foreclosure. The purchaser, under an Order of sale, when the property is sold in gross, is liable to be injured to the extent of the surplus money that will go into the hands of the mortgagor, for which the purchaser will have no lien, and his claim upon the regard and protection of the court, against such contingent loss, if it does not tend to throw the preponderance of the argument the other way, must serve at least to keep - the scales in equilibrio, and leave the question here as it stood in England.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Ky. 23, 1 Dana 23, 1833 Ky. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-martin-kyctapp-1833.