Dixon v. Hunter

102 S.W. 970, 204 Mo. 382, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 29, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 970 (Dixon v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dixon v. Hunter, 102 S.W. 970, 204 Mo. 382, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 76 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

A decree, nisi, went in plaintiffs’ favor in a suit under section 650, Revised Statutes 1899, to try, ascertain and determine the estate and interest of plaintiffs and defendant, respectively, in one hundred and twenty acres of described land in Pemiscot county. Prom that decree, defendant appeals in due form and time.

The original plaintiffs were Edgar Gr. Sugg and the widow and children of John E. Dixon, deceased. Sugg died pending the litigation. Thereupon his death was suggested, and on motion of Mary Baker, his daughter, and W. T. Sugg, his son, they entered their appearance and were made parties plaintiff by an entry of record.

[386]*386The petition counted on the theory that plaintiffs were seized as owners in fee of said real estate; that it was wild land, not in cultivation or in actual possession; that defendant claimed some interest in it, the nature and character of which was unknown to plaintiffs and could not he described, except that defendant’s claim was adverse and prejudicial to them.

Defendant’s answer was a general denial, saving that he claimed an interest in the real estate, averring that he was the owner of the whole of it. Accordingly, he set up his chain of title and pleaded facts to the effect that his title originated in a sale under a tax judgment and execution, that one Carleton purchased at said sale in 1883, and received a sheriff’s deed from one Peter.II. Scott acting as such officer, and that defendant held under mesne conveyances from Carleton. It is then alleged that the tax judgment was rendered against the proper owners of the land to whom it was assessed at the time, “to-wit, Sugg & Dixon;” that the judgment “recites” the names of “Sugg and Dixon;” that the execution ‘1 specified their names; ’ ’ that they were properly summoned by publication in the Gayoso Democrat, a newspaper published in Pemiscot county; that all the records of that county (including the records of the circuit court) were destroyed by fire in 1882; that Carle-ton’s said deed was “void upon •its face” through “accident or mistake,” in that it failed “to name the judgment debtors” and “recites that the judgment was against the land' instead of against the persons;” that it was not the deed that should have been made out and executed and was the product of a careless scrivener, etc.

The relief sought by defendant was affirmative, to-wit, the reformation of the sheriff’s deed “in accordance with the judgment and execution sale made thereunder; that the title in and to said land above des[387]*387cribed be divested out of plaintiffs and vested in the defendant; that the title to said land be adjudged and decreed to be legally and rightfully in the defendant;” and for further and general x’elief.

A replication, denying new matter in the answer, was taken as filed.

Defendant’s answer, asking affirmative equitable relief on matter in pais, changed the suit from one ^«¿¿-equitable to one strictly so.

I. At the door of the case, lies this question: Is defendant entitled, to correct and reform a sheriff’s deed in equity?

The general doctrine (subject to exceptions not in this case) and the reasons underlying it were stated by Justice Story, when on the circuit (Bright v. Boyd, 1 Story 1. c. 487), to be: “This is not the case of the defective execution of a power created by the testator himself; but of a power created and regulated by statute. Now, it is a well-settled doctrine that, although courts of equity may relieve against the defective execution of a power created by a party, yet they cannot relieve against the defective execution of a power created by law, or dispense with any of the formalities required thereby for its due execution; for otherwise the whole policy of the legislative enactments might be overturned. ’ ’1 To the same effect is the text of his work on Equity Jurisprudence (1 Story’s Eq. Jur. (13 Ed.), sec. 96; Ibid, sec. 177).

In Moreau v. Detchemendy, 18 Mo. 522, it was attempted to correct a sheriff’s deed by a suit in equity. The relief was denied on the authority of the text above and of Bright v. Boyd, and it was pointed out by Gamble, J., that the statutes since 1807 have contained provisions for the completion of sales and the execution of conveyances by sheriffs and that they furnish the remedy to be applied in such cases, and not the power [388]*388of a court of equity, j That case was followed in Moreau v. Branham, 27 Mo. 351.

In Ware v. Johnson, 55 Mo. l. c. 503, the same question was up. In that ease it was alleged that the sheriff’s deed by mistake misdescribed the land and evidence was offered to prove the mistake, which was excluded. It was held by Adams, J., that the testimony was properly excluded, and further: “A sheriff, in sales of land on execution, acts in the exercise of powers conferred on him by statute. His authority to make a deed is derived from the statute, and no court •except the court under whose process he acts, can supervise his proceedings. If he actually levies on a particular tract of land and sells the same as levied on, and by mistake falsely describes the land in his deed, he may, under .the supervision of the court issuing the process, make a new deed which will, as to parties and privies ■ and all purchasers with notice, relate to the time of the sale, and pass the title from that time. If the sheriff who made the sale becomes incapacitated to make the new deed, our statute provides that it may be made by another sheriff, and these provisions of the statutes must be pursued, and furnish the only remedy in such cases. It is a well-settled principle, which needs no illustration or citation of authorities, that a court of equity cannot aid the imperfect execution of a statutory power. The court therefore committed no error in striking out that part of the defendant’s, answer, and in excluding the evidence, and refusing the instruction in regard to the alleged mistake in their sheriff’s deed.”

In Hall v. Klepzig, 99 Mo. l. c. 87, the two Moreau cases and Ware v. Johnson were followed — Black, J., saying: “The court did not, therefore, err in refusing to correct the sheriff’s deed, by making the recital conform to the judgment and execution, even if [389]*389the místele, was satisfactorily shown.” The concensus of opinion in the highest courts of our sister states lies with the same view. See Stewart v. Wilson, 141 Ala. 405, and a learned and most exhaustive note by Mr. Freeman, following the report of the same case in 109 Am. St. Rep. 33.

The statutory remedy, pointed out by Gamble and Adams, JJ., was in existence at the time of the sheriff’s sale and deed and is now live law (R. S. 1899, sec. 3218) and, on the authority of the foregoing cases, must be held preclusive.

II. If defendant had timely pursued his statutory remedy under section 3218 and had obtained a new and correct deed and was relying on that deed for title in the case at bar, an altogether different question would be up for determination. But on an answer that admits the sheriff’s deed on which he relies is void, and which invokes the power of a court of equity to correct the deed and establish title by such correction, he must be held to stand or fall on the existence of such power. The power failing, as it does, the remedy is shut off.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 970, 204 Mo. 382, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-hunter-mo-1907.