Gossom v. Donaldson

57 Ky. 230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 30, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 Ky. 230 (Gossom v. Donaldson) 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
Gossom v. Donaldson, 57 Ky. 230 (Ky. Ct. App. 1857).

Opinion

Judge Simpson

delivered the opinion of the court.

Holdensby Dixon being the owner of one undivided sixth part of a tract of land, containing four hundred acres, which had been patented in the name of his father, John Dixon, deceased, Presley Donaldson, in February, 1824, brought a suit in chancery to subject this undivided interest to sale, for the payment of a debt which the said Holdensby Dixon owed him. On the 27th of November, 1829, a decree was-rendered in that suit, making partition of said tract of land, and allotting one-sixth part thereof to Holdensby Dixon, which was ordered to be sold for the payment of the debt due to the complainant. It was afterwards sold and purchased by the complainant, Presley Donaldson , to wdiom it was conveyed by the commissioner who made the sale, and on the- 5th of March, 1830, the sale and conveyance by the commissioner were approved and confirmed by the court.

In 1827, during the pendency of the suit wdiich had been brought by Presley Donaldson, Thomas Middleton obtained a deed of conveyance for one half of said four hundred acres from two of John Dixon’s heirs, one of whom assuming to be the owner of Holdensby Dixon’s interest therein, sold and attempted to convey it, as well as his own interest, to the purchaser, Thomas Middleton. On the 15th of November, 1829, a deed was made to said Middleton, by part of the heirs of John Dixon, deceased, purporting to convey to him the remaining undivided half of said four hundred acres of land.

[236]*236In 1827 Middleton sold the whole of said tract of four hundred acres to William Gossom, and gave him a bond, in which he bound himself to make him a good title thereto, within eighteen months from that date. Gossom, under and by virtue of his purchase, entered on the land in 1828, and he and his son, T. B. Gossom, who claims under him, have had it in possession ever since, claiming it as their own. Middleton does not appear to have made a deed to Gossom according to the stipulations in his bond, but in the year 1833 four of the heirs of John Dixon, deceased, Ploldensby Dixon being one of the four, executed a deed to him for the land, in which it wasrecited, that they had previously sold said land to Middleton, and attempted to convey the same to him by defective conveyances, and as he had sold it to Gossom, wdio had paid him for it, that deed was made to the latter to correct and supply all the defects in the .previous conveyances.

The four hundred acres of land purchased by Gossom under Dixon’s claim, was covered by an elder patent, which issued to Solomon P. Sharp. Gossom in 1829 instituted a suit in chancery against Sharp’s heirs, asserting a superior equity to the land under Dixon’s title, and praying that the defendants might be required to release and convey to him the elder legal title. Pie obtained the relief he sought, by a decree which wTas rendered in 1839, and acquired the legal title by a deed executed by a commissioner for and on behalf of Sharp’s heirs.

A petition in equity was exhibited in this case, in May, 1855, by Donaldson against Gossom, for the interest of Holdensby Dixon in the four hundred acres of land. The plaintiff asserts a right to it under the purchase which was made at the decretal sale in the suit already referred to, and contends that William Gossom having purchased the land after the suit was instituted, was a purchaser pendente lite, and therefore neither he nor his vendee can controvert his right to it.

1. The reversal of a decree in chancery, under which a sale ofland has been made, does not ordinarily vacate and render void the sale, though the complainant in the suit be the purchaser. (8 B. Monroe, 105.) The general rule is, that the sale is valid where it is made under the decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, unless the decree be void, altho’ it may be reversed. (4Dana ¡ 438; 7 B. Mon. 57; 12/6.472.) 2. To maintain the benefit of a lis pendens, it is not necesary that the suit should be prosecuted with even ordinary diligence^ it can be lost only by unreasonable and unusual n e g 1 igence in its prosecution; such was not the case in the suit here referred to, and the purchaser is to be regarded as a lis pendens purchaser, and ■bound by the decree.

[237]*237The defendant insists that the purchaser at the decretal sale acquired no title to the land; and if he did, that the suit had been prosecuted so negligently that it had lost the character of a lis pendens at the time the purchase was made by Middleton. He also insists that he has obtained the legal title from Sharp’s heirs, and is not bound to surrender it to the plaintiff, and he also pleads and relies upon the statute of limitations as a bar to the plaintiff’s action.

The ground upon which it is contended that the purchaser at the decretal sale acquired no title is, that the decree under which the sale was made was subsequently reversed by this, court; and no other decree was rendered in the case directing a sale of the land, but the only decree which was rendered merely confirmed the sale made under the previous decree, which act of the court, as argued, was entirely nugatory, and of no avail whatever. The reversal of the decree under which the sale was made did not, however, have the effect attributed to it. It did not vitiate the sale, nor divest the purchaser of the title which he had acquired. The fact that the complainant himself was the purchaser made no difference. It is the policy of the law to sustain judicial sales, and there is the same reason for protecting parties who are purchasers that there is for protecting strangers. (Benningfield vs Reed, 8 B. Mon. 105.) The general rule is, that a purchase at a decretal sale, made by a court of competent jurisdiction, is valid, unless the decree be void, although it may be reversed. (Bustard vs Gates, 4 Dana, 438; Lampton vs Usher’s heirs, 7 B. Monroe', Harrison vs Hord, 12 B. Monroe, 472.)

The suit had been pending upwards of three years when Middleton purchased the land in contest, and it was about two years afterwards that Donaldson made his purchase at the decretal sale. The suit might have been prosecuted with more vigilance and dispatch. It is not necessary, however, in order to retain the character of a lis pendens, that a suit [238]*238should he prosecuted with even ordinary diligence, but as a lis pendens is created by the institution of the suit, it can only be lost by unusual and unreasonable negligence in its prosecution. Considering the nature of the controversy, in which a question of fraud in the execution of a deed of conveyance was involved, there was not such laches, in our opinion, in the prosecution of the suit in which the decretal sale was made, as would operate to exonerate Middleton from his liability as a prudente lite purchaser; but having purchased during the pendency of the suit he and those claiming under him are bound by the decree and sale that were made in the case, consequently the title of Holdensby Dixon to an undivided sixth part of the four hundred acres, of which his father was the patentee, vested in the purchaser at the decretal sale, and Middleton acquired no right or title to it by his purchase, or at least any right or title he did acquire was subordinate to that with which the purchaser at the decretal was invested.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Ky. 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gossom-v-donaldson-kyctapp-1857.