Hart v. Gardner

81 Miss. 650
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 81 Miss. 650 (Hart v. Gardner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. Gardner, 81 Miss. 650 (Mich. 1902).

Opinion

Calhoon, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question is on the action of the court below in sustaining the demurrer of the appellee Blumenberg to appellant’s (Hart’s) amended bill. From this bill it appears that on January 30, 1895, Mrs. Jennie L. Nelson was, so far as the record of deeds showed, the owner of the land in controversy, which land was [654]*654wild and uncultivated, and without visible possession by any one; that on November 25, 1896, she duly conveyed it to appellee Fredericks, taking his four promissory notes for the installment of the credit price, the last falling due December 10, 1900, but this conveyance was never recorded; that on the same day, November 25, 1896, Fredericks executed a conveyance in trust to F. 0. Nelson, trustee, to secure her in the payment of these notes. It must be noted here that this trust conveyance, on its face, shows simply a trust to secure the promissory notes by the security of thé land in controversy, as if the notes were for a general debt disconnected from the land in controversy, and that it nowhere mentions the purchase price of the land. This trust deed was duly recorded in the year 1896, and provides for sale, in default of payment, to be made at Jackson, in Hinds county, Mississippi. The bill further shows that on February 15, 1897, Mrs. F. C. Nelson assigned the four notes to complainant, Hart, as well as the conveyance in trust, and that default was made, and the trustee sold the land at Jackson, and that Hart bought it at the sale, which occurred March 14, 1898, and the trustee made a'conveyance of the la,nd to Hart, which was duly filed for record on March 16, 1898, and recorded; that after this deed of conveyance and trustee’s conveyance, and on January 13, 1900, a judgment was rendered against Mrs. Nelson, and on April 6th of the same year (1900) execution was issued under it, and levy made by the sheriff on the land, and sheriff’s sale on the first Monday of May, 1900, at which appellees Gardner and Nabors became the purchasers, and received a deed from the sheriff, which is recorded; that the land, together with other land, aggregating 960 acres of wild land, and averred to be in gross more than $3,000 in value, was thus sold to Gardner and Nabors for only $21, which was averred to be so grossly an inadequate price as should have put any one on inquiry; and it is averred that this ‘1 was notice to defendants and to the world that the title was out of Mrs. Nelson, or at least sufficient [655]*655notice under the law to put said purchasers at said sheriff sale upon inquiry as to the true ownership of said property, which information could have been easily obtained, but- they made no effort to ascertain the ownership of said land.” This quotation is made from the bill because the point is made on it for Hart that the allegation required answer from Blumenberg, the purchaser from Gardner and Nabors, of good faith without notice. The bill further avers a subsequent purchase by Blumenberg from Gardner and Nabors, and the conveyance in that behalf is of record, and that these conveyances under the judgment are a cloud on Hart’s title, and the prayer is, that they be canceled as such, and the averment is that the sale by the trustee, F. C. Nelson, being at Jackson, Mississippi, was not void, but merely voidable, under the law of 1896, p. 109; and the further prayer is for a foreclosure by the court of that trust deed. Gardner and Nabors' answered, setting up their purchase at execution sale, and their sale by quitclaim to Blumenberg, before these proceedings were begun, and they disclaimed all interest in or claim to the property; and so the bill, exhibits, and Blumenberg’s demurrer only, are before us. We cannot concur with counsel for appellant in the contention that the clause of the bill set out above, of itself, required Blumenberg to answer denying notice, and we withhold concurrence in full view of Harper v. Reno, Freem., Ch. (Miss.) 323, cited by them, and in full view of Greaves v. Atkinson, 68 Miss., 598 (10 South., 73). In Harper v. Reno, the parties were being dealt with at first hand, and the complainant Harper charged in his bill that he was the holder of notes of Nobles from Reno, that judgments in favor of other parties were recovered against Reno, and sale of the same land was made under execution, and that Nobles procured one Johnson to become the apparent buyer, in order to defeat Harper’s lien, and in fact furnished him the money to make the pretended purchase, and the prayer was for foreclosure of the trust deed against the land as being in truth the land of Nobles. Of course, in that case, although [656]*656the bill did not specifically say that Johnson had notice, still' it was of the very essence of his claim of title that he should fully set up his complete good faith in his answer.

In Greaves v. Atkinson, 68 Miss., 598 (10 So., 73), there appeared a bill to enforce a resulting trust against the purchaser at a bankrupt sale, and it was held that if the bill had shown, as in the case before us, all the facts, and they showed on their face that defendant was a purchaser for value, demurrer might be interposed. In Atkinson v. Greaves, 70 Miss., 42 (11 So., 688), it is held that payment of consideration is prima facie evidence of want of notice ; and in the case at bar it must be taken from the allegations of the bill itself that Gardner and Nabors paid their bid at the execution sale, and that they sold to Blumenberg, who bought in good faith. If they became the purchasers at the sale and received a deed from the sheriff, and if it was sold to them for $21, all as charged in the bill, it must be assumed as against the pleading, that they paid their bid, especially as the only objection of the bill is that the price was so grossly inadequate as to necessarily put any purchaser on notice of defects in the title.

We cannot subscribe to the doctrine advanced that, in an attack like this on the title of a remote vendee, the inadequacy of the bid at execution sale can be invoked to destroy his title on the ground that this, per se, put him on notice. There is no charge of any fraud, conspiracy, or collusion between the judgment creditor and Gardner and Nabors or Blumenberg. There was no motion in the circuit court to vacate the sale, as in Baldwin v. McGee (Miss.), 14 So., 451, and in the case of Busick v. Watson, 72 Miss., 244 (16 So., 420). The posture .of the parties cannot be changed in this proceeding simply because of that.

A purchaser or creditor on examining the title would have found it perfect on the records in Mrs. Nelson, and was not bound to take notice of a trust deed executed by any other person. Her deed to Fredericks was not of record. It hung [657]*657out in the air like Mahomet’s coffin, and did not touch the records anywhere, so far as Mrs. Nelson’s name appears in the line of title. The trust deed of Fredericks’ is merely to secure a debt, and on its face presents .no connection with her antecedent perfect title. Baker v. Griffin, 50 Miss., 163, and authorities there cited; Sessions v. Reynolds, 7 Smedes & M., 153; Hiller v. Jones, 66 Miss., 636 (6 So., 465). The case of Stovall v. Judah, 74 Miss., 747 (21 So., 614), cannot affect the settled doctrine because of a cúrrente cdlamo

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Bluebook (online)
81 Miss. 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-gardner-miss-1902.