Hardy v. Heard

15 Ark. 184
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 15 Ark. 184 (Hardy v. Heard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardy v. Heard, 15 Ark. 184 (Ark. 1854).

Opinion

Hon. S. H. HbMpstbak, Special Judge

delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.

In 1846, James K. Bogers, owner in fee, of tbe west-balf of tbe nortb-east quarter of section twenty, in township seven south, of range nineteen west, containing eighty acres of land, situated in Clark county, sold one acre of it, in tbe town of Arkadelphia, described by certain lines, to Kobert Montgomery, for one hundred and fifty dollars, who paid a part of tbe consideration money, took actual possession, and erected, at a cost of one hundred dollars, a dwelling bouse and blacksmith shop on tbe lot, and enclosed a garden. Montgomery took a bond for title, which was not produced ; but tbe scope and purport of it appears to have been that Montgomery was to pay one hundred dollars to Bogers, in two years in annual instalments, and then receive a title; and if not punctually paid tbe lot to revert, and improvements to be forfeited. On the' tbe 15th of January, 1848, Bogers and wife, among other lands, conveyed by deed of bargain and sale with general warranty, to Henry N Hardy, tbe appellant, tbe above described tract of land; but expressly reserving “all pieces and parcels of land granted, bargained and sold to sundry persons, in tbe town of Arkadelphia, in one and two acre lots,” leaving one hundred and thirty seven acres as .the quantity conveyed to Hardy.

Thomas A. Heard and Thomas B. Sloan obtained judgment against Montgomery, on the 25th of March, 1848, before a justice of the peace, for seventy-three dollars and ninety-one cents, and execution thereon being returned “ nulla bona,” a transcript was taken and filed in the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court of Clark county, where the lot was situated, on the 10th of July, 1848, in accordance with the statute. (Digest 661; State use of Brown vs. Crow et al., 6 Eng. 652.) Execution issued out of that office, on the 1st of December, 1848, by virtue whereof the same lot -was levied on as tbe property of Montgomery; and which was advertised, and sold, at the succeeding court, in due form- of law, to Heard and Sloan, the appellees, as the last and best bidders, and as the purchasers at the sum of ten dollars; and, who having paid the bid, the sheriff, on the 24th of September, 1849, made and acknowledged a deed to them in due form, and which was immediately recorded. About this time, they paid to Rogers the balance of the purchase money on the lot, and Rogers and wife made them a quit claim deed, embracing the one acre lot sold to Montgomery, dated the 29th of March, 1849; but which was neither acknowledged nor recorded, and which was certainly defective as a legal conveyance, and fell far short of the title Rogers was bound to make, on payment of the purchase money.

Heard and Sloan filed their bill to obtain title to the one acre lot, purchased by them at execution sale, and for general relief, and they made James 3L Rogers, Henry K. Hardy and Robert Montgomery defendants to their bill. The Court, at the hearing, decreed “ that all the right, title, interest and claim of the defendants to said lot vest absolutely in the complainants, and that the said complainants have an absolute title in fee simple, and discharged from any and all claim of the defendants.” From this decree, Hardy appealed.

The first inquiry is, whether Heard and Sloan had such title to the lot as to authorize them to apply to a court of equity for relief, and of this we think there can be no doubt; nor do we apprehend any question can be made as to the jurisdiction of a court of equity to grant the relief sought. The deed of the officer to them, recited the names of the parties to the execution, and when issued, and the date and amount of the judgment, the return of “nulla bona” on the execution issued by the justice, the filing of the transcript, and other particulars as to the execution and sale; and which recitals are by express statute made evidence of the facts therein stated. (Digest 504.) The manifest design of this statute was to relieve the purchaser from the necessity of producing a judgment and execution, levy and advertisement ¿ or, in. other words, to excuse him from the duty of proving, in the first instance, that the law had been complied with; and leaving it to the party, who would contest the sale, to establish its invalidity. The statute rests on the fundamental principle that public officers, executive, judicial and ministerial, are presumed to discharge their duties, until the contrary is made to appear; and on the further ground that there is no better method of encouraging fair judicial sales, and protecting tona fide purchasers, than to afford all reasonable facilities to enable them to reap the fruits of their purchases. A deed, not containing the recitals mentioned in the statute, or not showing on its face a compliance with the law, could not be evidence under the statute. (Moore vs. Brown, 11 How. S. C. R. 424.) Nor is a deed in compliance with the statute, any thing more than prima faoie evidence, as was held by this Court in Newton vs. The State Bank, (14 Ark. 10); and may, therefore, be entirely overthrown by evidence; because, unless it was competent to prove that the sale had not been made at all, or that it had not been made in accordance with law, the door would be closed to enquiry; the deed, whether true or false, import absolute verity on its face, and so far from being only primiafaeie evidence would become conclusive evidence of the facts recited. Such a doctrine would place it in the power of an officer to deprive a man of his freehold against law, and with comparative impunity. Montgomery had a bond for title, and consequently had such an interest in the land, as was subject to a judgment lien, and subject to sale under execution. Our statute is very comprehensive, and declares all real estate subject to execution, whereof the defendant, or any person for him is seized “in law or equity,” and also the lien of a judgment; attaches to all estates and interests in lands and tenements, whether “ legal or equitable,” liable to be sold under execution. (Digest 498, sec. 25; 627 sec. 36.) The vendee of real estate, holding a bond for title, is in equity considered as the real owner, whether he had paid the purchase money, or actually taken possession or not subject only to the legal and equitable rights of the vendor for the unpaid purchase money. As owner, he has an interest,1 to which the lien of a judgment attaches, and whichfmay be seized and sold under execution. In Smith et al. vs. Robinson, (13 Ark. 534,) the nature of title bonds was elaborately discussed, and the Court held that the parties to such a contract stood in the relative positions of mortgager and mortgagee, and that all the incidents of a mortgage attached to and controlled these kind of contracts. (5 Porter 452.) It follows, then, that the vendee, in analogy to the mortgager, is the owner of an equity of redemption, and that this is the real and beneficial estate, which is descendible by inheritance, devisable by will, and alienable by deed, precisely as if it were an absolute estate of inheritance at law (4 Kent 159, 160); subject, of course, to the rights of the vendor. The purchasers, then, succeeded to all the rights of Montgomery, and although the amount bid by therm was small, yet it was the highest and best bid, at a public sale, on regular notice, at the time and place appointed by law, and which appears to have been fairly and properly conducted.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ark. 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-heard-ark-1854.