Sayre v. Elyton Land Co.

73 Ala. 85
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 73 Ala. 85 (Sayre v. Elyton Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sayre v. Elyton Land Co., 73 Ala. 85 (Ala. 1882).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

— There is more of apparent than of real difficulty in determining the character.of the' pleading which is the foundation of the present proceeding. The difficulty arises from the fact, that the pleader seems to have intended it should serve the purposes of a petition, or of an original bill, as the one or the other may by the court be deemed the more appropriate remedy to obtain the relief sought. As a general rule, while the suit is undecided (while it remains in the court, and subject to its control), in which a decree of sale is rendered, an original bill is not the appropriate remedy to impeach and set aside the sale. In that suit, the fairness and regularity of the sale are open to contestation; and before it is perfected by confirmation, in the absence of some peculiar circuriistances, can not be assailed and litigated in a collateral suit. Until confirmation, the sale is not complete — is under the control of the court, which can exercise a sound discretion in regard to it, granting or withholding confirmation, as the rights and interests of the parties, and the ends of justice may require. — Hutton v. Williams, 35 Ala. 503. Any party in interest, or the purchaser, if a stranger, who by his bid becomes a cpuasi party, may move for, or resist confirmation; and it is but seldon there can be either reason or justice for resorting to collateral remedies. The order or decree of confirmation is essentially a judgment; it fixes the rights and liabilities of the purchaser, and operates a divestiture of title. It is an incident of the suit in which the decree of sale is rendered, and ought, in that suit, to be resisted. If there is'no resistance, whatever of injury may result is attributable to a;;waut of diligence, from which courts can not relieve parties. Cases -will and do arise, in which an inequitable or illegal sale may be confirmed, and a want of diligence in resisting confirmation not attributable tó the parties in interest, the court is-not-powerless to relieve them, '• When the suit in which [97]*97tlie decree was rendered is pending and undetermined, after confirmation, whether relief should be sought by petition, or more formally by bill, rests largely in the discretion of the court and depends upon-the particular situation of the case and the relation of the parties to it. “It maybe difficult,” said Chancellor Kent, in Codwise v. Gelston, 10 Johns. *521, “ to draw a precise line between cases in which a party7 may be relieved upon petition, and in which he must apply more formally by bill. Petitions are generally for things which are matters of course, or upon some collateral matter which has reference to a suit in court.” And further, “ the mode of application depends very7 much upon the discretion of the court.” If there be not peculiar circumstances rendering it necessary2, that the proceedings and issues should be put in a more formal and permanent shape, than they could be by petition, -or if petition is not an inadequate remedy7, the court will discountenance a resort to the more dilatory and expensive remedy of an original bill. The question is one largely of mere convenience. — Brown v. Frost, 10 Paige, 243; Tooley v. Kane, Smedes & Marsh. (Ch.) 518 ; Ashbee v. Cowell, Busbee’s Eq. (N. C.) 158; Campbell v. Gardner, 11 N. J. Eq. 423. A suit in equity can rarely be commenced otherwise than by original bill, or a bill in the nature of an original bill; it is only in exceptional cases that a petition is the proper mode of commencing suit. It pertains to and is an incident rather of a pending suit, unless it is addressed to some special authority7 or jurisdiction the court exercises; instances of which are, the appointment of a guardian for an infant, or the allowance of maintenance from his estate. "When the original suit, in which the decrees of- sale and of confirmation were rendered, has been determined finally — no longer remains in the court, and under its control,- — the appropriate remedy to impeach the sale, and to obtain a resale, is by original bill.— Coffey v. Coffey, 16 Ill. 141; Henderson v. Herrod, 23 Miss. 434; McMinn v. Phipps, 3 Sneed (Tenn.), 196 ; Crawford v. Tuller, 35 Mich. 57. In the present case, the original suit had been finally determined, and the institution of a new proceeding was necessary to enable a party aggrieved to obtain relief from the inequitable or illegal execution of the decrees rendered in its progress. The bill is throughout termed an “ application,” and the complainant is termed “ complainant, or petitioner; ” these terms are unimportant in construing the pleading and ascertaining its real 'character. In a court of equity, this is ascertained from a consideration of the matters of substance embodied in the pleading, from its averments, objects and prayer, rather than by the title given by7 the pleader, or by his neglect to entitle it. — Ex parte Smith, 34 Ala. 455. When these are considered, it is obvious the [98]*98present pleading is an original bill, and seems to us the most appropriate proceeding, if not the only proceeding, which could be framed to obtain the relief sought. The more important point of controversy is the validity of the several sales impeached by the bill; the first of which was made by the register, under a decree' of the court ordering a sale; the second was made by the sheriff, under an execution issuing on a- decree for the recovery of a specific sum of money, subsequently rendered in the same suit. These decrees were founded on a decree pro oonfesso taken against the appellant; on a bill filed against him as a non-resident of the State, and of which he had notice only by publication. The object and purpose of that bill was the enforcement of a lien for the payment of the purchase-money on lands situate in this State, the contract of sale having been here made.

The jurisdiction of a court of equity oyer defendants not residing in the State, and consequently not subject to be personally served with process, is statutory and limited. It is not of every case of equitable cognizance against such defendants, that the court may take jurisdiction. The statute defines with precision the cases in which the court may intervene. The object of the suit must concern lands or personal property situate in the State; or the cause of action must have originated here; or performance of the act which is to be compelled, the parties must have contemplated should he here performed. — Code of 1876, § 3753. If the case be not of the character defined in the statute, though it is of undoubted equitable cognizance, the court is without jurisdiction of a defendant not brought in by the personal service of process.— Holman v. Bank of Norfolk, 12 Ala. 369. Glover v. Glover, 16 Ala. 440. The objects and purposes of the original suit, independent of the fact that -the cause of action arose in the State, made a case of which the statute gave the court jurisdiction, though the appellant, the defendant to be affected and bound by the decree, was not a resident of the State.

The statute not only defines the cases in which the court may take jurisdiction of non-resident or absent defendants, but it appoints and orders the mode of proceeding against them, and declares the effect of the decree rendered, if they do not appear and defend. The jurisdiction and authority, like all jurisdiction and authority derived from, and dependent upon statute, must be taken and accepted with all the limitations and restrictions the statute creating it may impose.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ala. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayre-v-elyton-land-co-ala-1882.