Rich v. Bellamy

577 P.2d 1352, 282 Or. 263, 1978 Ore. LEXIS 866
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1978
DocketTC 417-784, SC 25388
StatusPublished

This text of 577 P.2d 1352 (Rich v. Bellamy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rich v. Bellamy, 577 P.2d 1352, 282 Or. 263, 1978 Ore. LEXIS 866 (Or. 1978).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This is an appeal from an order setting aside a judicial sale of real property based upon a finding that plaintiff was mistaken in his bid at the execution sale and that defendant would be unjustly enriched if the sale was confirmed.

That order was based upon plaintiffs motion to set aside the sale which alleged that:

"* * * Plaintiff thought he was purchasing the real property above described when he bid the sum of $17,000.00 for such real property, when in fact he was only purchasing an undivided one-half interest, the remaining undivided one-half interest being owned by the wife of the Defendant, such wife being Frances M. Bellamy.”1

Defendant then filed a motion to strike plaintiffs motion on the ground that it failed to state facts sufficient to warrant the relief demanded. A hearing was then held, at which evidence was produced which may be summarized as follows.

The facts.

On January 4, 1975, defendant bought a truck and trailer from plaintiff, giving plaintiff a 90-day promissory note for $5,700 as a down payment, to be secured by a mortgage on the home owned jointly by defendant and his wife. The balance was to be financed through a loan company. For reasons not entirely clear, that financing was not completed, but plaintiff took a judgment against defendant on the note. Execution was then levied upon the property owned by defendant and his wife.2

[266]*266On the day of the judicial sale plaintiff appeared with a friend, Charles Hoover, but without his attorney. Defendant was also present, with his attorney. Plaintiff made a bid of $17,000. Defendant’s attorney then bid $17,015, but when he did not produce the necessary funds, plaintiff’s bid of $17,000 was accepted. The proceedings were then postponed to enable plaintiff to get a cashier’s check, after borrowing that amount from Mr. Hoover. Defendant was then given a receipt for that amount. Plaintiff testified that in making that bid he understood that he was "buying the whole property” and that if he had known that he was only acquiring defendant’s interest in the property he would not have bid $17,000 because the property had been appraised, for $18,000 and he would not have paid $17,000 for "half of it.”

Plaintiff admitted, however, that prior to the sale he had a financial statement from defendant showing that the property was owned by defendant and his wife, as well as a copy of a deed naming defendant and his wife as grantees; that he knew that defendant’s wife had refused to sign a mortgage on the property; that he knew that she had an interest in the property.3 He testified, however, that he nevertheless made a mistake in thinking that in bidding $17,000 he was buying "the whole property” and not "a half” of it.

Plaintiff’s friend, Mr. Hoover, also testified that he thought that "the whole property” was being sold, free "from the interest of defendant’s wife,” and that he would not have loaned $17,000 to plaintiff to make the bid had he known that only defendant’s interest would be acquired.

It is of interest to note that defendant also testified that at the time of the execution sale it was also his understanding that plaintiff had "bought the whole property” and that he and his wife "would be moving out.” Defendant’s attorney, however, testified that in [267]*267bidding $17,015 he knew that only defendant’s interest in the property was being sold; that he had "no idea” what that interest in the property was worth, but made that bid "to try to get as much money for the property as I could.”

Plaintiff discovered some two weeks after the sale that he was acquiring only the defendant’s interest in the property. He then filed the motion to withdraw and set aside his bid. At the hearing on that motion defendant offered to convey the property to plaintiff for $17,000 if plaintiff would satisfy his judgment for $5,700. Plaintiff declined that offer.

At the conclusion of the hearing the trial judge stated that he was "convinced there has been a mutual mistake and the sale should be set aside.”

A judicial sale may be set aside for mistake by the purchaser prior to an order confirming the sale.

Defendant’s primary contentions are (1) that by reason of the provisions of ORS 23.490 plaintiff, as the purchaser, had no right to "object to his own bid” and cannot contend that "his mistake constitutes an 'irregularity’ in the proceedings,” within the terms of that statute and that "the mere fact a party bid more than the property is worth” is not such an "irregularity” as to support an order denying confirmation of a sale;4 (2) that the purpose of a judicial sale is to obtain the highest price for the property sold; that the rule of [268]*268"caveat emptor” applies to such a sale; that the fact that plaintiff failed to exercise due diligence and hardship alone is not a sufficient basis for equitable jurisdiction; and that, in any event, plaintiff did not plead and prove that he was prejudiced in that there was no competent evidence of the value of an undivided one-half interest in this property; and (3) that plaintiff’s mistake, if any, was a unilateral mistake, which is insufficient and that "plaintiff did not plead nor did he prove that his unilateral mistake was known to the defendant.”

Several of the cases cited by defendant in support of these contentions, however, involve suits in equity to set aside judicial sales or other proceedings brought after the entry of orders confirming such sales.5 The rule is different when objection to a judicial sale is made before the entry of an order confirming the sale.

In Ensley-Koebel v. Nat. Guar. Prop., 279 Or 391, 395, 568 P2d 655 (1977), also involving a claim of mistake by a purchaser at a judicial sale, we held that:

"Until an order has been entered confirming a sheriffs sale under a decree foreclosing a mortgage, such a sale can be set aside by the trial court for mistake relating to the property covered by the mortgage. * * *”

Although defendant’s brief cites no Oregon cases holding directly to the contrary, in view of the serious contentions by defendant in a well written brief we have re-examined the rule as stated in Ensley. Upon doing so we find that it is supported by previous decisions of this court and is also in accord with other authorities.

In Miller v. Achurch, 50 Or 478, 93 P 332 (1908), an appeal from an order confirming a judicial sale after [269]*269overruling objections by the purchaser, as in this case, it was held (at 481):

"* * * Where the procedure to secure the confirmation of a sale on execution has not been regulated by statute, it has been uniformly held that plaintiff, defendant or the purchaser is entitled to prosecute a motion or action to set aside a sale, because each of them may be aggrieved thereby, unless from some cause he has ceased to be prejudiced or affected by it, or by his misconduct he has brought about the wrong of which he complains.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
577 P.2d 1352, 282 Or. 263, 1978 Ore. LEXIS 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rich-v-bellamy-or-1978.