Runge v. Brown

45 N.W. 271, 29 Neb. 116, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 202
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 N.W. 271 (Runge v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Runge v. Brown, 45 N.W. 271, 29 Neb. 116, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 202 (Neb. 1890).

Opinion

Norval, J.

On the 7th day of December, 1886, the defendant in error recovered a judgment in the district court of Cheyenne county against the plaintiff in error for $3,475, exclusive of costs. The costs and increase were $619.43.

[118]*118An execution was issued on said judgment December 7, 1886. On the day following, a levy was made upon certain personal property, which was appraised at $1,728.62, and on the same day, for want of sufficient personal property whereon to levy, said writ was levied upon a part of lot 4, block 28, Sidney, and 240 acres of land in Cheyenne county. The personal property was sold on the 21st and 22d days of December and the 5th day of January for $1,963.45. On the 11th day of January, 1887,' said land and lot were sold to different purchasers. The original return of the sheriff on the execution showed that the land and lot were appraised in gross. On leave being given by the court, the sheriff amended his return, showing that the lot and lands were appraised separately.

On exceptions being filed by the defendant in execution the sale of the 240 acres of land was set aside at the June term, 1887, of the district court, because the purchaser thereof was one of the appraisers.

Subsequently the plaintiff in error filed the following exceptions to the confirmation of the sale of said lot 4, to wit:

. “1. That the said sale was illegal, irregular, and not made according to law.

“2. That the sheriff levied upon and advertised for sale the lands and lot in question before exhausting by sale the goods and chattels of the defendants levied upon by him.

“3. There was no valid appraisement made by said sheriff, in that the sheriff appraised said lands and lot in gross before said sale.

“4. That G. B. Blakely, one of the appraisers of said lands and lot, was the purchaser at said sale of said lands, and for which reason this court, at the June term of 1887, set aside the sale of said lands, is the same G. B. Blakely, one of the alleged appraisers of the said lot, subsequent to the sale of said lands and lot, thereby rendering void the sale of both lands and lot.

[119]*1195. That the appraisement of the said lands and lot separately, after the sale thereof, to meet the requirements of the statute, is contrary to law and void.

“ 6. That the plaintiff John L. Brown caused articles to be published prior to the sale of said lands and lot in the Sidney Telegraph and the Sidney Democrat, two newspapers published in Sidney, Nebraska, as notices to the general public — wherein said plaintiff accused the defendant of fraudulently obtaining the title to the lands and lot in question, and cautioning the public against purchasing the same — thereby preventing the sale of said lands and lot for their actual market value.

“ 7. That the judgment debt was satisfied in full by the showing apparent on the sheriff’s return without the sale and price obtained from said lot, the sheriff having in his hands, over and above all claims against the defendant, the sum of $1,050.”

The objections to the confirmation of the sale of said lot 4 were overruled and the sale was confirmed, to reverse which the case was brought here on error.

The first exception and objection to the sale is entirely too general to be considered. Objections to a confirmation of a sale must specifically point out the errors relied upon.

Objection is made to the sale, because the sheriff levied upon and advertised the lot before selling the personal property taken under the execution. It clearly appears that the personal property was levied upon before a levy was made upon the real estate, and that the personalty was inadequate to satisfy the execution.

After a sheriff has levied upon goods and chattels which the appraisment shows to be insufficient to satisfy the writ he may undoubtedly levy upon real estate, even before the sale of the personalty. The personal property, however, must be first sold. This is within the meaning .of section 483 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that personal property shall be first levied upon, and, for [120]*120want of goods and chattels, that the officer canse the execution to be made of the lands of the debtor. The authorities fully sustain the action of the sheriff in this regard. Freeman in his work on Executions, sec. 279, says : “ If the defendant has both real and personal property, but not enough of the latter to satisfy the writ, there is no objections to levying on the real estate at the same time or even before the levy is made on the,personal property, if the latter is first advertised and sold.” (See Sullenger v. Buck, 22 Kan., 28.) Care, however, should be taken that no inore real estate is levied upon or sold than with the aid of the personal property will be sufficient to satisfy the execution.

The next contention is that the lands and lot were appraised together in gross and not separately. If this were true, the sale would have to be set aside, for it is firmly settled by the numerous decisions of this court that separate tracts or parcels of land must be appraised separately. The original return of the sheriff, it is true, makes it appear as if the lot and the 240 acres of land were appraised in gross, but the amended return of the sheriff with the appraisement shows that the interest of the defendant in the lot was appraised separately at $600, and that the land was appraised at $6 per acre. The defendant makes affidavit that the land and lot were not appraised separately. This appeared to be true, as shown by the original return when this affidavit was filed, but after the sheriff amended his return no further showing was made by the defendant. Runge does not state in his affidavit that he was present when the appraisement was made, nor that he had any personal knowledge how the property was appraised. Without such a showing we may reasonably infer that he obtained his information solely from the original return of the sheriff. The showing made does not overcome the presumption of the correctness of the officer’s return. This disposes of the third and fifth exceptions to the sale.

[121]*121It is urged that because G. B. Blakely, one of the appraisers, purchased the lands, it renders void the sale of both the lands and lot. We do not think so. The purchase by an appraiser at a sheriff’s sale of one tract does not affect the validity of the sale of another tract to another person.

The district court was asked to vacate the sale because the plaintiff Brown had caused notices to be published in the Sidney newspapers prior to the sale, accusing the defendant of fraudulently obtaining the title to the lands and lot in question, and cautioning the public against purchasing the same. It is sufficient answer to this objection to say that these notices were published five months before the judgment was rendered in the district court, and the issuing of the execution under which the sale was made. The notices do not appear to have been given for the purpose of preventing competition at the sheriff’s sale. It is not at all likely that the giving of these notices six months before the sale in the least affected the price which the property sold for.

The only other objection to the sale which was urged in the court below was, that the lot was sold after sufficient property had been disposed of to satisfy the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W. 271, 29 Neb. 116, 1890 Neb. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/runge-v-brown-neb-1890.