Richards v. Holmes

59 U.S. 143, 15 L. Ed. 304, 18 How. 143, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 59 U.S. 143 (Richards v. Holmes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richards v. Holmes, 59 U.S. 143, 15 L. Ed. 304, 18 How. 143, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 678 (1856).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CURTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court for the District of Columbia. The appellants filed their bill in that court to set aside a sale, made to satisfy a prior incumbrance on land, upon which they claimed to - have a second incumbrance. In the court below, some question appears to have been made concerning the priority of the incumbrances ; but none is made here, it being conceded, that though that claimed by the complainants was the earliest in date, the other was first recorded, and takes precedence. .

The sale in question was made Under a deed of trust, whereby Piolines, the debtor,.conveyed to the defendant, Philip R. Fendall, in trust to secure the payment of a promissory note, bearing date May 1, 1846, payable in two years from date, for ¡$2,800 and interest, payable annually.

■ It is objected that the sale, which was made on the 21st of October, 1847, aftér one year’s interest had become due, but before the principal sum was payable, was premature. This depends upon the meaning and effect of the power of sale contained in the deed. It was competent for the parties to agree to a foreclosure by sale for non-payment of interest, and the question is, whether they did so agree. The event in which the trustee is empowered to sell,.is thus described in the deed:—

“ But if the hereinbefore described promissory note,- with the interest legally due there.on, shall not be fully paid off and discharged when said note shall be due and payable, and payment of the same shall be demanded, or if any note or notes given in substitution for or renewal of the hereinbefore described promissory note shall not be fully paid off and discharged ■ according to the tenor and effect of the said substitute or new note or notes, together with the interest legally due on such substitute or note or notes, so that any, default be made in payment of any part of *146 the aforesaid debt of two thousand eight hundred dollars and ■interest, then so soon after such default, &c.”

The omission to pay the first year’s interest was a default within the express words of this power. That interest was part of the interest secured by the note, and a failure .to pay it was a “ default in payment of part of the aforesaid interest.” The deed authorizes the trustee to sell for any such default, and, consequently, the sale was not premature.

It was argued that the trust deed does not describe the note as bearing annual interest, and, consequently, that the subsequent incumbrancer has a right to insist that, as against him, there was no power to sell for non-payment of such interest.

It is true the deed does not purport to describe the interest which is to become due on the noté.; but it clearly shows that it bore interest at some rate, and payable at some time or times, and this was sufficient to put a subsequent incumbrancer on inquiry as to what the rate of intérest and the time or times of its payment were. The deed, in effect, declares, and its ■ record ■gives notice to subsequent purchasers, that its purpose is to secure the payment of such interest as has been reserved by the note; ,the amount, and date, and time of payment óf which are mentioned. We do not think the mere omission to describe' in the deed what that interest was to be, is a defect of which advantage can be taken by the complainants.

The complainants further insist that the property was not duly advertised. The provision in the deed of trust upon this subject is as follows : “ It shall be the duty of the said Philip R. Fendall or his heirs to enter upon the hereinbefore conveyed piece or parcel of ground and appurtenances, and sell the same at public auction to the highest bidder, or at private sale, for cash or credit, according to his or their discretion, after having given public notice of such sale, by advertisement, at'least thirty days, previously thereto, in the National Intelligencer, or in some other newspaper printed or published in the city of Washington aforesaid.”

Inasmuch as the trustee was empowered to sell at private sale, as well as at public auction, his power extended to a private sale .made at any.time after thirty days’ notiee. Having given notice for the space of thirty days that hé was about to sell the property, he might, at any time after the' expiration of that’thirty days, have proceeded to sell it at private sale. But this notice should be such as to call for purchasers. at private sale.1 The notice given was of a sale at public auction,, This did not 'call for purchasers, except at the time and place mentioned in the notice, •’ No salé was made, at the time, and place designated, iii .the thirty days’ notice, published in. the National Intelligencer: *147 At that time and place the attendance of bidders was so small, that the trustee believed an attempt to sell for a fair price would be fruitless; and he adjourned the sale for the space of fourteen days, giving notice of such adjournment in the same newspaper of the next day. At the time and place thus fixed for the adjourned sale anofher postponement took place, for'the same reasons, for one week; and the place of sale was changed from the premises to the rooms of the auctioneer. Of this postponement, also, public notice was given on the next day, in the same newspaper.

There is no reason to suspect the least unfairness on the part of the trustee, or any one concerned. His conduct seems to have been'dictated solely by an honest desire to obtain the best price for the property. Nor is there any ground for believing that either of these postponements prejudiced the interest of the complainants. They stand upon the objection, that though the trustee might have sold on the first day, of which thirty days’ notice was given, he .could not on that day adjourn the sale.

But we consider that a power to a trustee to sell at public auction, after a certain public notice of the time and place of sale, includes the‘power regularly to adjourn the sale to a different time and place, when, in his discretion fairly exercised, it shall seem to him necessary to do so in order to obtain the fair auction price for the property.

If he has not this power,'the elements or many unexpected-occurrences may prevent an attendance of bidders, and cause an inevitable sacrifice of the property. It is a power which every prudent owner would exercise in his' own behalf under the circumstances supposed, and which he may well be presumed to intend to confer on another. This power of sale does not undertake to prescribe the particular manner of making the sale. It is to be at public auction, and “ after having given public notice of such sale by advertisement at least thirty days-; ” but it assumes that the sale will be conducted as such sales are usually conducted. A sale regularly adjourned, so as to give notice to all persons present of the time and place to which it is adjourned, is, when made, in effect the sale of which previous public notice was given. .

' The courts of several States have gone further in this direction than we find necessary, though we do not intend to intimate any dofibt of the correctness of their decisions. They have held that a public officer, upon whom a power of sale is conferred by law, may adjourn an advertised public sale to a different time and place, for the purpose of obtaining a better price for the property. . Tinkom v.

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Bluebook (online)
59 U.S. 143, 15 L. Ed. 304, 18 How. 143, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-holmes-scotus-1856.