Lansburgh v. McCormick

224 F. 874, 140 C.C.A. 296, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1940
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1915
DocketNo. 1290
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 224 F. 874 (Lansburgh v. McCormick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lansburgh v. McCormick, 224 F. 874, 140 C.C.A. 296, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1940 (4th Cir. 1915).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

The primary issue in this cause is whether the Pocahontas Coal & Coke Company has acquired the title of Max Uansburgh to a tract of land containing about 44,000 acres. This issue depends on the validity of two sales of the land as the property of Uansburgh, under which the coal company claims; one a sale by the order of the District Court October 20, 1897, of 16,504 acres, and the other a tax sale of the entire tract December 13, 1897. Uansburgh filed his bill on July 11, 1907, to set aside these sales. Henry McCormick, who was the purchaser at both sales, having died, his sons, Henry B. McCormick and Vance McCormick, as his executors, and the former in his own right, and Wm. M. Ritter, who received title from McCormick and conveyed lo the coal company, were made, co-defendants with the coal company. An accounting for timber cut and coal mined, and generally for the rents and profits, was sought against all the defendants. Uansburgh having died on June 10, 1910, [876]*876the suit was^ revived and an amended bill filed in the name of his administrator and heirs at law. The District Court, after a full hearing on the merits, dismissed the bill in a formal order.

The judicial sale was made under these circumstances: On June 10, 1889, Lansburgh entered into a written agreement with Henry McCormick to convey to him 10,000 acres of the large tract above mentioned, to be ascertained and surveyed as indicated in the paper, for the price of $35,000, of which McCormick paid $23,353.33. A dispute arose as to the land to be conveyed, and Lansburgh offered to refund the money paid and annul the agreement. After refusing this offer McCormick brought suit for specific performance, and by his amended bill asked that if it should turn out that Lansburgh could not make a good conveyance, then that the court decree the return of the purchase money paid, making it a lien on the land. The litigation resulted in the rescission of the contract and a judgment against Lans-burgh for $27,899.37, which included the .cash payment made by McCormick and taxes paid by him pending the suit. The decree provided that if Lansburgh should'not pay the amount found against him within 60 days, two parcels of the land, aggregating 16,504 acres should be sold to pay the debt. At a sale made under this decree October 20, 1897, McCormick bought the land for $23,333.33. Lansburgh filed exceptions to the commissioner’s report of sales, but the sale was confirmed. After applying the proceeds and a sum paid into court by the Panther Lumber Company for timber cut, a balance of $12,623.65 remained in favor of McCormick against Lansburgh, which was decreed to be a lien on the remainder of the land.

[ 1 ] This sale is attacked as a nullity because under the order of the court the sale was made in the city of Charleston, and not, as required by the federal statute, on the premises or at the courthouse door of McDowell county, in which the land lies. The court having jurisdiction to order the sale, the mistake of directing that it be made at a place different from that required by the statute did not make the sale void for want of jurisdiction, but was an error to be corrected by appeal or by direct application to the trial court. Godchaux v. Morris, 121 Fed. 482, 57 C. C. A. 434. This court, it is true, held in Cumberland Co. v. Tunis, 171 Fed. 352, 96 C. C. A. 244, that a purchaser who had purchased at a private sale, ordered by the court, contrary to the statute requiring sales to be made at auction, should be relieved from his purchase even after confirmation, upon his own application to the court wherein the cause was pending. But this is very far from holding that a purchaser who is invited by the court to rely on its order of sale would be deprived of his purchase after he has paid his bid and received the court’s title, because the sale had not been made at the place designated by the statute. .Indeed the court recognizes and distinguishes the case of Godchaux v. Morris. The cases holding sales made by merely ministerial officers at a place not authorized by statute to. be void obviously stand on a different footing.

[2] But if the law were otherwise, Lansburgh’s conduct in requesting the judge to have the decree of sale carried out as soon as possible, in advertising the sale by pamphlets, in making no objection, though [877]*877present at the sale, and in filing exceptions to the report of sale, which made no allusion to the error of ordering the sale at Charleston, would eslop him from now having the sale annulled after the rights of third parties have become involved. Kirk v. Hamilton, 102 U. S. 68, 26 L. Ed. 79; Cumberland Co. v. Tunis, supra.

[3] The objections to the tax sale of the entire tract made on December 13, 1897, are more serious. Against this sale it is first alleged that Henry McCormick was either a tenant in common with Hans-burgh, or stood in such trust relation to him that he could not acquire title against him at a sale for taxes. The position rests mainly on this provision of the order confirming the judicial sale above discussed:

“And, tlie court being advised that there are divers and sundry persons within the bounds of said tract of 50,000' acres, who claim to hold adversely tracts and parcels of land by titles inferior to the title of Lansburgh, and who have been and are committing trespass upon the same, and there being a possibility that the statute of limitations may be successfully pleaded should the prosecution of this action be extended, and no action speedily taken to stop the running of the statute, it is hereby ordered that unless the said Lansburgh, within 30 days from the date of this decree, institute actions of ejectment in his own name to recover such tracts or parcels of land, then the said complainant, Henry McCormick, or his assignee or assignees, is hereby authorized and empowered to institute and prosecute in the name of the said Lansburgh such action or actions of trespass or both as he may be advised, the expenses and costs of which, however, to be advanced by the said McCormick, whether instituted by the said Lansburgh or by the said McCormick in Ms name, so much thereof as shall not be recovered from the defendants in such actions of ejectment to be a charge upon said lands, subject to the or.der of the court.”

This order was made at the instance of McCormick and opposed by Lansburgh. It therefore amounted to a voluntary undertaking on the part of McCormick to advance the expenses and look to the land for repayment- if they could not be collected from the alleged trespassers. The order clearly made a community of interest in the litigation between Lansburgh and McCormick, and contemplated that any recovery of the land should be for the benefit of both — Lansburgh as owner and McCormick as lienholder — and that McCormick should have a further lien for his expenses. But it did not impose upon McCormick any other duty to Lansburgh, or any burden to pay the taxes on any portion of Jyansburgh’s land; and the record affords no evidence that McCormick in any other way assumed burdens either expressly or impliedly. Suits were brought in the name of Lansburgh for the recovery of the lands referred to, the declaration being signed by E. L. Buttrick, S. L. Flournoy, and M. F. Sides as plaintiff’s counsel. Mr. Flournoy was counsel for Lansburgh in his litigation with McCormick. He and Mr. Buttrick, McCormick’s attorney in the litigation with Lans-burgh, died before the trial of this cause. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
224 F. 874, 140 C.C.A. 296, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lansburgh-v-mccormick-ca4-1915.