Derry Bank v. Webster

44 N.H. 264
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 1, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 N.H. 264 (Derry Bank v. Webster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Derry Bank v. Webster, 44 N.H. 264 (N.H. 1860).

Opinion

Bellows, J.

This is a bill in equity by the Derry Bank against John G-. Webster and Nathaniel F. Emerson. The plaintiff claims title to certain lands in Chester, formerly the property of said Emerson, by virtue of the levy of executions against him, one in favor of the Carroll County Bank, and the other in favor of one Barnes ; the bill alleging a lien upon said lands, by attachment made December 17, 1857, and a levy in due time to preserve it; and a transfer of the title so acquired to the plaintiff.

The bill states that Webster claims title to the same land by deed from the said Emerson, dated November 16,1857, but that the deed was not in fact delivered until after the attachment, and that the price was not paid until after the attachment and notice of it; and, also, that the conveyance, whenever made, was fraudulent and void [265]*265as to Emerson’s creditors ; and the plaintiff prays that the aforesaid deed of November 16, 1857, be decreed to be void.

To the title of the plaintiffs, as derived from these levies, the defendants make several objections, which will first be considered.

In the first place they contend that the debtor lived in the county where the lands lie, as appears by the execution itself, he being described as of Chester; and yet the return does not state any notice to him, or that he lived out of the county, and not within twenty miles of the property. Upon examining the' return upon the execution in favor of the Carroll County Bank against said Emerson, this defect appears to exist, but the plaintiff proposes to prove that the debtor did, at the time, live out of the county, and more than twenty miles from the lands, and to amend the return accordingly; and we are of the opinion that such amendment may properly be made. In the return it is stated that notices of the sale were posted up in town, and that a notice was published in the county paper, which would be a proper mode of proceeding when the debtor lived out of the county, and more than twenty miles from the lands; and in the return of an extent of the same execution upon other lands in the same county, it is stated that the debtor did not so reside in the county, or within twenty miles from the property.

Under these circumstances we think enough was shown to render it probable that the requisitions of the law had been complied with, or, in- other words, enough to amend by. Whittier v. Varney, 10 N. H. 301; Gibson v. Bailey, 9 N. H. 168; Baker v. Davis, 19 N. H. 336; Buck v. Hardy, 6 Greenl. 162; Johnson v. Day, 17 Pick. 106; Hovey v. Wait, 17 Pick. 196; Childs v. Barrows, 9 Met. 413.

The next objection arises on the return of the sale of the equity of redemption in the lands mortgaged to Green. The land is described as in two parcels, and the copy of the return, as certified by the clerk of the court, after setting out both tracts, the right of redeeming which is alleged to have been seized and sold, says, “ the same tract of land being subject to a mortgage,” &c., instead of the same tracts, &c.

On the part of the plaintiff it is alleged that the original execution and return were destroyed by the fire which burned the Carroll county records, and that, as recorded in the registry of deeds in Rockingham county, the word “ tracts” instead of “ tract” is used, and we think that the certified copy produced is not conclusive, but that, upon satisfactory evidence being furnished, the court have power to allow a correct copy of the execution and return to be filed in place of the one destroyed.

It is urged, also, that the sale was not at the expiration of thirty days’ notice, but of thirty-one days ; but without counting the day of posting the notice, the sale was on the day after the expiration of thirty days, excluding the Sunday, which happened to be the thirty-first day, and the sale, therefore, was properly on the following day.

Another objection is, that the return upon the Carroll County Bank execution does not recite any attachment upon the mesne [266]*266process, but we do not think it essential that it should. Goodall v. Rowell, 15 N. H. 578. In this case it is laid down that such reference is not necessary in the deed or levy, and that in this respect it stands like an execution upon land previously attached. But the copy of the return as certified by the clerk is of a sale of the right possessed hy the debtor, on the nineteenth day of December, when the attachment appears to have been made on the seventeenth, and the return, as recorded in the Rockingham county registry, so states it; and we think that, upon satisfactory proof that the return referred to the 17th of December, a copy may he filed accordingly, as in the other case.

It is further objected that the notice of the sale upon the Barnes execution was defective, because it contained no reference to the deed to the Carroll County Bank, to which the sale, as appears by the return, was in fact subject. On this point the facts are that having in his hands the two executions against Emerson, before described, the officer posted notices on the 24th day of May, 1860, of a sale on the 25th day of June following, upon both executions, of the debtor’s right to redeem the land in question, alleged to be under mortgage to Green, and on said 25th day of June he sold the equity upon the Carroll County Bank execution, and then sold it again upon the Barnes execution, but subject to the other sale; and we are unable to perceive any valid objection to the proceeding, nor is any authority cited or found by us to sustain the objection. On the contrary, it is quite clear that the notice, at the time it was issued, was sufficient, and we see nothing in the fact that a further incumbrance had afterward intervened, that would render the notice invalid, and require a new seizure and notice, at the risk of losing the lien. The object of the law requiring the notice was, of course, to give publicity to the sale, to insure a fair price for the property, and there is no reason to suppose that fewer persons would be attracted to attend the sale for want of notice of the further incumbrance. In the case of a fraudulent over statement in the notice, of air outstanding incumbrance, designed to prevent competition, the sale would probably be held invalid; but if correctly stated at the time, it ought not to be affected by a subsequent payment by the debtor of part of the mortgage debt, and yet this would make a stronger case than the one before us. Eor these reasons we are satisfied that the notice and sale were valid, and upon making the amendments indicated the levies must be adjudged good.

This brings us to a consideration of the title of "Webster as derived from the deed of November 16,1857, and the first question is, was the deed delivered before the attachment ? On this point the bill charges that the deed, although dated November 16, 1857, and recorded December 17, 1857, was not in fact delivered to Webster, or any person for him, until long after it was recorded, and after the attachment. The answer of Webster states a bargain made November 16,1857, for the farm, at $6,300; $1,353 to be paid in the note of Emerson and Eitz, two notes of Webster in one and two years, and the balance, after deducting the amount of an outstanding mortgage, to be paid in cash; and that, in performance [267]

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.H. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derry-bank-v-webster-nh-1860.