Cowan & Co. v. Sapp

74 Ala. 44
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 74 Ala. 44 (Cowan & Co. v. Sapp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowan & Co. v. Sapp, 74 Ala. 44 (Ala. 1883).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

— 1. The jurisdiction of the Circuit Court, to set aside the sale of the lands, because of the satisfaction of the execution at the time it was made, can not be doubted. Every court has an inherent power to prevent or correct the abuse of its own process by parties controlling it, or by the officer charged with its execution. — Mobile Cotton Press v. Moore, 9 Porter, 679; Abercrombie v. Conner, 10 Ala. 393; Henderson v. Sublett, 21 Ala. 626; Lankford v. Jackson, Ib. 650; Lockett v. Hurt, 57 Ala. 198. If the sale were impeached because of mere error in the process, or because of mere error or irregularity in its execution, the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court would be exclusive; for the correction of errors or irregularities in the judgments of courts of law, or in legal process, or its abuse, is not within the province of a court of equity. But, if fraud or illegality attends the sale, or if it has been followed by the execution of a conveyance casting a cloud upon the title, and which ■ may be at any time employed to disturb the possession, the jurisdiction of a court of equity is concurrent with that [47]*47of the court of law. — Ray v. Womble, 56 Ala. 32; Lockett v. Hurt, 57 Ala. 198.

2. If the execution was satisfied at the time of the sale of the lands,' — and such is the averment of the original bill, — the plaintiffs in execution, to whom the satisfaction was made, being the purchasers, the sale is voidable. In some direct proceeding it must be avoided, to restore the defendants in execution to the condition in which they were when it was made. Sales of lands by sheriffs under legal process not void upon its face, which stands good until it is vacated by the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, unless it be process void because of the death of the party in whose favor it was issued, or because of the death of the party against whom it issues, can not be collaterally impeached.— Ware v. Bradford, 2 Ala. 676; Fournier v. Curry, 4 Ala. 321; Hubbert v. McCollum, 6 Ala. 221. The fact of satisfaction resting in parol, could not appear upon the face of the conveyance of the sheriff; nor would it appear from the judgment or execution, to which the conveyance refers as the source of the power of the sheriff to make the sale. The conveyance by the sheriff not disclosing the invalidity of the sale, at law, in an action for the recovery of the lands, it would prevail as valid and operative. It is within the peculiar jurisdiction of a court of equity, to intervene for the cancellation of conveyances of lands, at the instance of a party having rightful possession, the invalidity of which can be made apparent only by a resort to extrinsic evidence. — Ray v. Womble, 56 Ala, 32; Rea v. Longstreet, 54 Ala. 291.

3. A party seeking the vacation of a sale under legal process, whether he invokes the jurisdiction of the court from which the process issued, or the concurrent jurisdiction of a court of equity, must act promptly. Unnecessary, unreasonable delay-in moving, will be regarded as a waiver, or as acquiescence in the irregularity, illegality or fraud, which may have attended the sale, if it be not accounted for satisfactorily. There is no period fixed and defined, within which the motion to vacate a sale must be made in a court of law,’ nor within which there must be a resort to a court of equity. Each casé is, of necessity, controlled by its peculiar circumstances. In Abercrombie v. Conner, 10 Ala. 296, in answer to an objection that the party moving a vacation of the sale of lands, because of the satisfaction of the execution under which it was made, had too long slumbered upon his rights, the court said: “Upon the sale of lands under execution, a mere right of action passes to the vendee; but, when personal property is sold, the possession itself is delivered. In the latter case, the application to set aside the sale must be immediate, or, at least, as soon as reasonably may be, or the delay must be excused; but, when lands [48]*48are the subject, the motion may be made at anytime before the purchaser takes possession, or recovers it by suit, unless the possession is acquired in so short a time after the sale that an application can not be conveniently made. Until the possession is disturbed, the parties in interest may have had no notice of the sale, or, if they have, perhaps may infer that the purchaser will not attempt to claim under his purchase. There is no necessity for the party in possession to be active, until the purchaser obtains possession, or makes an effort to acquire it.” The length of time which had intervened between the sale and the motion for its vacation does not appear from the report of the case, nor does it appear whether the party complaining had notice of the sale at the time it was made.

In the preceding case of Hubbert v. McCollum, 6 Ala. 225, the court had said, in regard to the time a motion to avoid a sale of lands under execution should be made, that it would be most regular at the first term succeeding the return of the process, though, -for satisfactory reasons, the court could interfere at a subsequent term. The case returned to this court, and it appearing that the party moving to set aside the sale, having full knowledge of the sale, and of the facts relied on for its vacation, had permitted more than four years to elapse before intervening, during a large portion of which period he had been engaged in litigating the title with the purchaser, the court said: “The law does not regard such delay with indulgence, and the inference of acquiescence on the part of the plaintiff in any supposed fraud or irregularities in the sale may well be drawn, requiring stronger proof to warrant the interposition of the court.” McCollum v. Hubbert, 13 Ala. 289.

In Daniel v. Modawell, 22 Ala. 365, the deputy sheriff became the purchaser of lands at a sale made by the sheriff, having at the instance of the defendant in execution' forbid the sale, and purchasing at a price greatly below the value of the lands. The plaintiff in execution permitted more than four years to elapse, during which time the purchaser had taken possession and sold to third persons. The court refused to interfere, though it was said, if a timely application had been made, there could have been no hesitation in vacating the sale. In McCaskell v. Lee, 39 Ala. 131, the motion was not made until more than four years after the sale, and until eighteen months after the purchaser had instituted suit for the recovery of the possession of the lands. There Was no explanation of the delay, — no satisfactory reason given for it; under these circumstances, it was declared the motion could not be entertained.

We would hesitate to announce it as an inflexible rule, or as a general rule, as seems to have been expressed in Abercrombie v. Conner, supra, that a proceeding, either at law or in equity, [49]*49for the vacation of a sale of lands under legal process, will be entertained at any time before the purchaser takes possession, or recovers it by suit. Reasonable diligence, as well as good faith, should be rigorously exacted from parties seeking the disturbance of judicial sales, and the destruction of titles derived from them; and whether there has been reasonable diligence, must depend upon the particular circumstances — whether they are such as may have induced inaction, or ought to have quickened vigilance.and action.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Ala. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowan-co-v-sapp-ala-1883.