McClean v. Harris

82 Tenn. 510
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 82 Tenn. 510 (McClean v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClean v. Harris, 82 Tenn. 510 (Tenn. 1884).

Opinion

Freeman, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

This bill is filed to assert title to a tract of twenty-six acres of land in Bedford county, and have respondent’s title declared void, as a cloud on the title of complainants.

The case is this: One Foster, a judgment-creditor of T. B. Allison, had a levy on the land in controversy, under, an execution based on a judgment from this court, and the land regularly sold, October 26th, 1875, Foster becoming the purchaser at the sum of $80.00.

[511]*511One 2nd day of November, 1875, seven days after the purchase by Foster, Allison, the debtor, sold the land to respondent in this case for $425 in notes on one Taylor, and his son, and made her a deed in fee with general warranty of title, under which she was put into possession, “no reference,” as the report of the Referees says, “ being made to the equity of redemption.” Complainants had obtained a judgment before a justice of the peace against Allison, July 24, 1874, for $215.71, on which execution had been issued and levied on this land, April 25, 1875, but this levy was subordinate to the previous levy of Foster. In July, 1876, complainants paid to Foster the amount of his bid, with interest, amounting to $83, evidently for the purpose of redeeming the land as a judgment-creditor of Allison.

Foster, on 15th of August after this, gave complainants a receipt or acknowledgment of the payment of the amount of his bid on the land, referring to the previous sale and purchase by him, concluding as follows: “I hereby authorize the sheriff to execute a deed to them for said land.” Complainants also proceeded regularly to advance the amount of their judgment, $215, on said land, crediting the same as required by law, making the sum of $334, at which they now claim to hold the land. The sheriff made a deed to complainants, reciting the above facts, and the time for redemption having expired, complainants bring this bill, and claim they have the better title as against respondent, and that her’s was an effort to co-operate with Allison in a fraud to defeat their title.

[512]*512The deeds and sales all being regular, the question is sharply presented as to whether the redeeming creditor, who redeems from' a purchaser of land within two years after his purchase, is defeated of his title .by a sale of the land by the. original debtor, after the sale and purchase, before the redemption had by another bona fide or judgment-creditor of the original debtor ?

It ’ is assumed in argument, as well as by report of the Referees, that the transaction was a redemption of the land by complainants from Foster, and the case is made to turn in the report upon the question whether it was a redemption or a sale by Foster to complainants. Holding that it was a redemption and not a sale, the chancellor’s decree is reported as erroneous, which went on the theory that it was a sale by Foster of his interest under his purchase at the execution sale, and he thereby obtained the better title.

We need but say, in passing, that this distinction is, to say the least of it, merely a verbal one, giving different names to what in fact, and all essential qualities, is but the same thing. Whether a party buys from the purchaser at the sale, and simply pays what may be contracted between them, or pays the amount of his bid, and then advances a debt, by way of judgment under the statute, he is still but a purchaser of the right obtained under the original sale, and stands in the shoes of the .party whose right he buys. If this party obtained a defective title, the redeeming [as- well as purchasing party gets only a [513]*513defective title, so that, practically, so far as the nature of the title is concerned, the two transactions would 'be identical. In either ease the party thus obtaining a title from the purchaser,' would get but his title, and hold it subject to redemption, as provided by section 2949 (new Code), as “one claiming under him.”

It is assumed, both in argument and report of the Referees, that under the cases of Huffacre v. Bowman, 4 Sneed, 98, and Hepburn v. Kerr, 9 Hum., 727, the law is adjudicated to be, that if the debtor sells or releases his right of redemption after the sale, before another creditor has redeemed from the purchasing creditor, that all further right of redemption is gone on the part of his creditors, notwithstanding the two years given such creditors in which to redeem has not expired. This is the reasoning of Judge McKinney, in the conclusion of the case of Huffacre v. Bowman, 4 Sneed, 98, but is' purely dictum. In fact, the learned judge so understands it, as he says on this question, “ but as this case does not in the pleadings assume this aspect, it were needless to pursue the discussion upon this point.” In other words, the case did not call for or admit of the adjudication of the question, because not raised by the pleadings nor, we may add, by the proof.

The case was a sale of the land of Bowman under a deed of trust in favor of Kincaid, who became the purchaser; afterwards, within two years from the trust salé, an arrangement was made between Huffaker, Kin-caid, the 'purchaser, and Bowman, by which Huffaere [514]*514advanced Kincaid his bid, paid Bowman $150, and' thereupon Kincaid conveyed the land back to Bowman, and Bowman at the same time conveyed to Huffacre in fee, ■ the transaction being an entire one, in consummation of a previous agreement of the parties. ’ In the meantime, one Cornelius Bowman had a decree against James E. Bowman, the original debtor, and in less than twelve months, while his right of lien to all lands of his debtor by statute was in force, caused an execution to be levied on the land, and claimed he thereby got a superior title to Kin-caid. But the court held that by the agreement of all parties, preceding the execution of the deeds, no interest was to be vested in Bowman; he was used merely as the medium for passing the title to Huffacre, and that the merely momentary seizin of Bowman never vested him with any title, and so the lien of the judgment and levy of execution was ineffective to convey any title, the real title having passed from Kincaid, the original purchaser, to his vendee, Huffacre. This is clear, and is all that was actually adjudicated in the case.

The case of Hepburn v. Kerr only held on this question, that after a sale of land under an execution, the debtor might assign his interest to a trustee for the benefit of his creditors, and such assignment would pass his equity of redemption, and. the trustee is entitled to redeem. This principle is one never doubted, and has been repeatedly approved by our courts. See 2 Cold., 169; Weakly v. Cockrill, 2 Tenn. Ch., 319; also 2 Tenn., 303.

[515]*515The theory of the argument of Judge McKinney in, Huffacre v. Bowman, is “that the right of another creditor to redeem is an equity of such creditor to be wrought out” through the equity of the original debtor, and in this view he concludes that when that debtor has parted with or released his right, the right of his other creditors is also gone. If the premise was correct, the conclusion would follow. But is it correct? With perfect respect for that learned judge, we think it is not.

By the statute (new Code, sections 2949, 2950, 2951, 2952 and 2953), the right -of redemption is given to the debtor whose land is sold, and then equally to his creditors.

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82 Tenn. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclean-v-harris-tenn-1884.