M'Connell v. Brown

21 Ky. 478, 5 T.B. Mon. 478, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 192
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 6, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ky. 478 (M'Connell v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M'Connell v. Brown, 21 Ky. 478, 5 T.B. Mon. 478, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 192 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinions

Judge Owsley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Tins case was formerly heard, and decided by this court, and the opinion is reported in Litt. Sel. Cas. 459.

On the return of that opinion and mandate to the court below, the parties agreed to dispense witli a jury, and submit, the case to the court, both law and fact, reserving the same rights which they could have if a jury had been sworn.

The plaintiff gave in evidence the patent as to one undivided third of the land, issued to the legal [479]*479representatives of Edmund Taylor, and proved that George G. Taylor was his eldest son and heir at law, and then showed a ■ judgment of the circuit court of Clark county, against George Q. Taylor, and several fruitless executions which issued upon the judgment to the sheriff of that county, and then the execution of fieri facias to Greenup county, and •the sale of the land in contest, under that execution to the lessor of the plaintiff, to whom a conveyance of the land was made by the sheriff. It was likewise proved, that George G. Taylor resided in Clarke county long before, and ever since the judgment aforesaid, was obtained against him. The sheriff by whom the land was sold being sworn as a witness, deposed that the defendants resided within the bounds of the patents, and they were living there when he made the sale under the execution, and then claimed the land as their own, adversely to George G. Taylor.

Judgment of the circuit court for defendant, and grounds of the decision. Sale of land under an execution improperly sent out of the county of the judgment, may pass the title to the purchaser.

The court below, gave judgment for the defendants for the following reasons, as certified by that court:

1st. There was no law which authorized the execution to go from the county of Clarke to that of Greenup, and therefore the purchaser acquired no title by the sheriff’s sale and conveyance.

2d. The land being in the possession of the defendants, adverse to the title of George G. Taylor, at the time of the saje, it was not the subject of execution and sale.

The first of these points has an answer in the ease of Cox vs. Nelson, 1 Monroe, 94, It was, in that case, decided, that an execution though improperly sent out of the county where the judgment was obtained, may pass a good title to- the purchaser under it, especially, if that purchaser be not the plaintiff in the execution. In this case, the purchaser is no party to the record, but a stranger thereto, and of course, according to the case cited, may, notwithstanding the execution went irregularly to the county of Greenup, have acquired a title under the sale and conveyance, by the sheriff.

Question of the liability of lands in adversary possession to sale under ihefieri facias, never heretofore decided. Lands not subject to sale under execution at common law. btalule subjects to sale under the fieri facias, lands in possession, remainder, or reverson, but not the interest the debtor may have in lands in adversary possession of others.

The second point has never been decided. We would not be understood to say that no case has ever occurred, in which it might not have been in the potver of the parties to make the question in the court of original jurisdiction; but in no case, hitherto brought before this court, has the point been so presented, as to command an argument from the bar, or an adjudication from the court; so that it must now be treated as a question npt heretofore settled.

In deciding this point, it is proper to premise, that it must turn exclusively, upon the construction of the acts of assembly, subjecting lands to sale under execution, for the payment of debts. It will be recollected, that lands were not subject to sale at common law, under Avrits of execution, and if land, in the adverse possession of others, may now be taken and sold under such writs, it must be owing to some statutary provision.

The first provision contained in the act, that we shall notice, is found in 1 Dig. L. K. 513; and dir rects the money due by the execution, to be made “of the lands, tenements and hereditaments in possession, reversion or remainder,” belonging to the debt- or.

Were these the only expressions contained in the act, which have a bearing upon the question, it. would seem to be a waste of time, to attempt to make them more clear, by any remarks. we could make upon the subject. Lands in the adverse possession of others, cannot possibly, with any propripriety, be said to be lands of the defendant, either in possession, reversion or remainder. Though lands are possessed adversely by others the defendant in whom the title resides, may be said to have an estate or interest, in possession of the land, as Avas held in giving a construction to the Avords used in the statute of wills, in the case of May’s heirs vs. Slaughter, 3 Mar. 505; but it is not, as in the statute of wills, the estate or interest in possession, reversion or remainder, which the defendant has in lands, that is directed by the provision of the act under con[481]*481sideration, to 1)0 sold, but it is the lands 'which the defendant has in possession, remainder, or reversion.

At the date of the statute subjecting lands to sale under the fieri famas, no sale could be made by the debtor himself of his interest in lands the adversary possession of others, and the act declares the sheriff’s conveyance shall pass only what the defendant might lawfully part with in the land; hence the sheriff cannot sell and convey lands in adversary possession.

But were there any room to doubt as to the import of the expressions contained in the act, and to which reference has been made, that doubt will be removed by adverting to the section of the act which directs the sheriff to convey the title, 1 Dig. L. K. 515. it declares, that the conveyance made by the sheriff as the law directs, “shall be effectual for passing to the purchaser,' all the estate and' interest, which the debtor had, and might lawfully part with in the lands.” Now it should be recollected that at the passage of the act, the common law, and the acts of the Virginia Legislature, made in aid thereof, against selling rights of entry, or choses in action, were in full force in this country. So that in declaring the effect of the conveyance made by the sheriff, the legislature cannot be understood to have intended by the expression, last cited from the act to have authorized the sheriff to sell and convey under execution, land of the debtor which is held adversely by others, and which, by the then existing laws, could not be lawfully sold and conveyed to others, by the debtor. It is true that the holder of title to land, though in the adverse possession of others, might, before and ever since the passage of the act subjecting lands to sale by execution, have parted with the title to the possessor; but it is equally true, that the title could not be lawfully conveyed to any other person except the person in possession, and it Is not to he presumed, that by the expressions “all the estate and interest which the debtor had, and might lawfully part with, in the lands,” the legislature intended to comprehend an interest or estate, which might be parted with by the debtor, to one person only.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Ky. 478, 5 T.B. Mon. 478, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mconnell-v-brown-kyctapp-1827.