Koch & Dryfus v. Bridges

45 Miss. 247
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 45 Miss. 247 (Koch & Dryfus v. Bridges) 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
Koch & Dryfus v. Bridges, 45 Miss. 247 (Mich. 1871).

Opinion

Peyton, C. J.:

Nathan Koch and Leon Dreyfus, on the 8th day of June, 1870, filed their bill of complaint in the chancery court of Pike county, against H. Q. Bridges, S. L. Weathersby, and M. E. Weathersby, alleging that Samuel Kaiser and Albert Cohen recovered a judgment in the circuit court of said county against Nathan Schwab, on the 6th day of March, A. D. 1860, for the sum of $155 21, which was regularly enrolled, as the law requires, on the 20th day of March, 1860. And at the time of the rendition of said judgment against him, the said Schwab possessed and owned in his [256]*256own right a certain parcel or lot of land in the town of Summit, in said county.

That the said Nathan Schwab, on the 11th day of December, 1860, executed a mortgage of the same property to one H. E. Weathersby, to secure the payment to him of the sum of $700, which mortgage was duly acknowledged and recorded.

That on the 25th day of July, 1866, Seaborn L. Weathersby and M. E. Weathersby, administrator and administratrix of the estate of said H. E. Weathersby, deceased, filed their bill in the chancery court of said county to foreclose the equity of redemption, and to sell the said lot for the payment and satisfaction of the debt secured by said mortgage.

That on the 31st day of March, 1868, pluries execution was issued on said judgment of Kaiser and Cohen against said Nathan Schwab, under and by virtue of which the said lot of land was sold by the sheriff, in the town of Summit, on the 4th day of May, 1868, to the said Kock and Dreyfus, for the sum of $.180, to whom the sheriff executed and delivered a deed for the same, which was duly acknowledged and recorded.

That on the 19th day of March, 1870, a decree was rendered by said chancery court foreclosing the equity of redemption, and ordering the property to be sold for the payment of the debt secured by the mortgage, and H. Q. Bridges was appointed by the court a special commissioner to execute said decree, who was proceeding to execute the same. The bill concludes with a prayer for an injunction restraining the said commissioner and administrators from further proceeding under said decree, and that, upon final hearing of the cause, the injunction may be perpetuated.

The defendants appeared and demurred to the said bill of complaint for the following causes:

1. There is no equity on the face of the bill.

2. The complainants have failed to show any title in themselves to the land in controversy.

[257]*2573. That the place of sale mentioned in said bill, to wit, the market house in the town of Summit, is not a legal place for a sheriff’s sale of land.

The demurrer was sustained by the court and the bill dismissed. And hence the case comes to this court by appeal on the part of the complainants, who assign for error the action of the court below in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the bill.

There is but one question in this case and that involves the'construction of our statute which provides that “all sales by any sheriff or other officer, by virtue of any execution or other process, shall be made at the court-house of the county, except when personal property, too cumbersome to be removed, shall be levied on, which may be sold at the place where the same may be found, or at any other convenient place, and also except where cattle, hogs, sheep or stock, other than horses and mules, are levied on, the sale of which may be made within the usual hours, on ten days’ notice, at the most public place in the neighborhood of the defendant; and such sales may be made on the first Monday of every month, or on the first Monday or Tuesday of each term of the circuit court of the county.” Rev. Code, 528, art. 277.

The obvious principle that prevails in all rules of construction of statutes is, to carry into effect the intent of the legislature and to secure the object intended to be secured by the statute. This statute was evidently intended to secure certainty and uniformity as to the place of sale of land by the sheriff under execution or other process at law. The public are presumed to know the place designated by the law for the sale of real estate under an execution at law, and every person wishing to purchase such property would know, without reference to advertisements, where the sale should take place. If this provision of the statute were merely directory, the sheriff, instead of selling at the courthouse, the most public place in the county, might sell in the most obscure corner of the county without giving the notice [258]*258directed by law to a bona fide purchaser, at a great sacrifice of property, for the want of public notice of the time and place of sale. Against this evil the law intended to provide by fixing the time and place of sale of this kind of property ; and to construe this provision of the statute with respect to the place of sale in any other way than as imperative, would tend to defeat instead of carrying into effect the intent and object of the law-makers, and would be at war with the well-settled rule of construction above alluded to. To our minds it is obvious at least, that the surest if not the only way of effectuating that intent, and guarding against the evils at which it was aimed; is to hold the requisition of the act imperative.

The counsel for the appellants contend, that the provision of the statute pointing out the place of sale of real estate is merely directory, and a sale at any other place would be equally valid. We do not concur with the counsel in this view of the law.

This mode of getting rid of a statutory provision by calling it directory is not only unsatisfactory, on account of the vagueness of the rule itself, but it is the exercise of a dispensing power by the courts, which approaches so near legislative discretion that it ought to be resorted to with reluctance, only in extraordinary cases, where great public mischief would otherwise ensue, or important private interests demand the application of the rule. There is no more propriety in dispensing with one positive requirement than another; a whole statute may be thus dispensed with when in the way of the caprice or will of a judge. And besides, it vests a discretionary power in the ministerial officers of the law which is dangerous to private rights ; and the public inconvenience, occasioned by the want of uniformity in the mode of exercising a power, is a strong reason for bridling this discretion. It is dangerous to attempt to be wiser than the law, and when its requirements are plain and positive, the courts are not called upon to give reasons why it was enacted. A judge should rarely take upon himself to [259]*259say that what the legislature have required is unnecessary. He may not see the necessity of it, still it is not safe to assume that the legislature did not have a reason for - it; perhaps it only aimed at certainty and uniformity. In that case, the judge cannot interfere to defeat that object however puerile it may appear. It is admitted that there are cases where the requirements may be deemed directory. But it may be safely affirmed that it can never be where the act, or the omission of it, can, by any possibility work advantage or injury, however slight, to any one affected by it. In such case, the requirement of the statute can never be dispensed with.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Miss. 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koch-dryfus-v-bridges-miss-1871.