Doty v. Federal Land Bank of Louisville

89 S.W.2d 337, 169 Tenn. 496, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 75
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 337 (Doty v. Federal Land Bank of Louisville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doty v. Federal Land Bank of Louisville, 89 S.W.2d 337, 169 Tenn. 496, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 75 (Tenn. 1936).

Opinion

Mr, Chiee Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This hill was filed by complainant, Doty, to enjoin the execution of a deed by J. M. Pickens, trustee, to *498 certain land sold nnder a trust deed by said trustee to W. B. Leech; the land having been previously conveyed in trust by Doty to secure an indebtedness to the Federal Land Bank of Louisville. The chancellor dismissed the bill upon motion, and complainant, Doty, has appealed to this court.

Some previous applications have been made to the court with reference to the appointment of a receiver and the reinstatement of an injunction, but these matters are not now important, and need not be considered in this discussion.

Passing over some immaterial details, Doty defaulted in the payment of installments of principal and interest secured by the trust deed, and the trustee duly advertised the land for sale for the satisfaction of the indebtedness secured. The bill avers that on the day of sale the complainant, Doty, before .10 o’clock in the forenoon delivered to said trustee a plan of division of the lands to be sold, subscribed by Doty and bearing date subsequent to the date of advertisement, and requested that only so much of the land be sold as was necessary to satisfy the debt and costs and that the land be sold according to the plan furnished. In the plan furnished to the trustee the land was so divided as to segregate a homestead set apart to Doty in a general creditor’s proceedings brought against him. Doty’s efforts were to have that part of the land, excluding the homestead, sold first, and the bill charges that a purchaser was present and notified the trustee that he (the proposed purchaser) would pay the amount of the mortgage indebtedness with interest and costs for that part of the land not indicated as homestead on the plan.

It was alleged, however, that the trustee declined to *499 sell the land in parcels as requested, ignored the notice given him, sold the entire tract, and that W. B. Leech became the purchaser at the trustee’s sale at a figure somewhat in excess of the mortgage indebtedness.

Complainant, Doty, relies on section 7802 of the Code of 1932 as follows:

“At any time before ten o’clock in the forenoon on the day of sale, the defendant or other person whose property is to be sold may deliver to the officer or person making the sale, a plan of division of the lands to he sold, subscribed by him, bearing date subsequent to the date of advertisement, in which case so much of the land as may be necessary to satisfy the debt and costs, and no more, shall be sold according to the plan furnished. If no such plan is furnished, the land may be sold without division.”

The chancellor was of opinion that this statute applied only to sales under execution and not to sales by a trustee under a mortgage. The chancellor was further of opinion that the chancery court was without jurisdiction to afford any relief to the complainant upon the facts appearing in the bill.

The first proposition advanced by the defendants in support of the chancellor’s ruling is that section 3 of chapter 14 of the Acts of 1799, upon which the compilers of the Code of 1932 appear to base the section quoted, is by its terms confined to sales under execution. It is argued that the original act only related to sales of the property of a defendant in execution; that the words “or other person whose property is to be sold” were added by the Code of 1932; that the trust deed here involved was executed in 1923; and that the Code pro *500 vision would accordingly not reach a sale under this trust deed.

Defendants ignore the fact that section 7802 of the Code of 1932 is almost a literal reproduction of section 2154 of the Code of 1858. The statute therefore upon which complainant’s hill is based was in force long before 1923. .

The next proposition of the defendants, accepted hv the chancellor, is that section 7802 of the Code relates only to sales under execution. This, in our opinion, is likewise a mistake.

Section 7802 of the Code of 1932 is contained in chapter 12, part 2, of that hook, and the title of the chapter is “The Advertisement of the Sale of Land Under Mortgages, Judicial Process,” etc. Section 2154 of the Code of 1858, the prototype of section 7802 of the Code of 1932, is contained in chapter 7 of the Code of 1858, and the title of that chapter is “Of the advertisement of the sale of land and negroes under mortgages, judicial process, etc.”

The first section of chapter 12, part 2 of the Code of 1932, section 7793, is in these words:

“Every person whose duty it is to sell land in a fiduciary capacity, or under judicial orders or process, shall, except in cases covered by section 10535, or in the absence of any special provisions on the subject in the authority under which he acts, publish such sale at least three different times in some newspaper published in the county where the sale is to be made, the first of which publications shall be at least twenty days previous to the sale.” ■ 1 I ' “'d [

Section 2145 of the Code of 1858 is in substance the same a§ section 7793 of the Code of 1932; the difference *501 in tlie two sections being irrelevant to the case before us. Both sections apply to persons whose duty it is to sell land “in a fiduciary capacity, or under judicial orders or process.”

From the foregoing it seems quite obvious that the provisions of chapter 12, part 2, of the Code of 1932, and the provisions of chapter 7 of the Code of 1858 relate alike to sales under execution and to sales under mortgages or trust deeds.

It may be observed that there is another chapter of the Code of 1932 entitled “Execution.” Article 5 of this chapter 13 (part 3) is entitled “Sales by Execution.” Section 8901 of the Code of 1932, under article 5 of chapter 13, part 3, provides that at any time before 10 o’clock A. M. on the day of sale “the defendant may deliver to the ' officer a plan of division of the lands levied on,” etc., thus carrying section 3 of chapter 14 of the Acts of 1799 into the Code of 1932 without extending its scope. Section 8901 of the Code of 1932 is a literal reproduction of section 3043 of the Code of 1858. The latter section is contained in chapter 13, article 5, of the Code of 1858, and such chapter and article are entitled “Of Execution” and “Sales by Execution.”

While we conclude, therefore, that the chancellor erred in adjudging that section 7802 of the Code of 1932, section 2154 of the Code of 1858, does not apply to sales under a trust deed, nevertheless we think the chancellor was required to dismiss the bill herein for the reasons following. Section 7800 of the Code of 1932, section 2152 of the Code of 1858, provides:

“Should the officer, or other person making the sale, proceed to sell without pursuing the provisions of this *502 chapter, the sale shall not, on that account, he either void or voidable.”

Section 7801 of the Code of 1932, section 2153 of the Code of 1858, provides:

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 337, 169 Tenn. 496, 1935 Tenn. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doty-v-federal-land-bank-of-louisville-tenn-1936.