Schribar v. Platt

19 Neb. 625
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 19 Neb. 625 (Schribar v. Platt) 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
Schribar v. Platt, 19 Neb. 625 (Neb. 1886).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This action was brought in the district court of Fillmore county by John Schribar and Catherine Schribar, his wife, against J. T. Platt & Co. and other defendants. The action is in the nature of an action quia timet; and its object that a certain sheriff’s deed of the real property described in the petition made to J. T. Platt & Co. upon a sale on execution in their favor and against one George W. Mesarvey, as well as certain judgments in favor of the other defendants and against the said George "W". Mesar-vey, might be declared to have conveyed no title and to be no lien upon the said land.

It does not appear from the record that either of the defendants other than J. T. Platt & Co. ever appeared or answered in the case or were ever served with process, so they need not be further noticed. The ground of plaintiff’s cause of action against J. T. Platt & Co. is, that the land was an United States homestead, as well as an exempt homestead under the homestead law of this state, in the hands of said George W. Mesarvey, who was the head of a family and residing on and cultivating said tract of land, which was less in quantity than one hundred and sixty acres, and of less value than two thousand dollars at the time of the sale of the same by the said George ~W. Mesarvey to the plaintiffs and the entering upon and taking possession of said land by the plaintiffs. Also that the indebtedness upon the judgment in favor of the said J. T. Platt & Co. and against the said George W. Mesar-vey, and upon which the said land was sold, was contracted before the issuance of the patent for said land by the United States. There are other points made by the plain[627]*627tiffs in their petition against the proceedings of the said J. T. Platt & Co. whereby they obtained the deed to the said land, to-wit, a misdescription of the judgment and of the transcripting thereof; and that the first execution issued by the said J. T. Platt & Co. against the said Mesarvey, together with the levy thereof and the appraisement of the said land and the marshaling of liens thereon, were, by the sheriff, under the orders and directions of the said J. T, Platt & Co., abandoned and set aside, another execution issued, and other proceedings had thereunder, including the sale of said land and its purchase by the said J. T. Platt & Co.

The plaintiffs in and by their said petition set up and claimed' title to the said land by virtue of a title bond therefor executed by George W. Mesarvey and Elizabeth Mesarvey, his wife; also by virtue of a warranty deed executed by the same parties in pursuance with said bond. The said J. T. Platt & Co., defendants, in and by their answer denied that the deed made by said Mesarvey and wife on the 12th day of June, 1882, was made in pursuance with the agreement contained in said bond, but that it was made and executed under another agreement, and that the consideration therefor was never paid 'by the said John Schribar or any one for him, and that no delivery of said deed was had at the time, but that said Schribar, failing to pay the purchase money, another contract was entered into between him and the said George W. Mesarvey on the ... day of June, 1882, stipulating that said Mesarvey should make a deed to Schribar upon the payment of a certain sum of money in said contract specified, and that said Schribar never complied with any of the stipulations in said agreement contained, and said defendants alleged that the judgment confirming the sale of said real estate under the execution is, and was at the time of filing plaintiff’s petition, in full force, and not reversed, and that no proceedings whatever had been had to appeal [628]*628from said judgment of confirmation or to reverse the ■same.

The defendants also denied that the debt on which the said judgment was obtained against said Mesarvey was contracted prior to the issuing of the patent for said land by the United States, and allege that it was contracted subsequent to the 20th day of February, 1877, and became a lien on said real estate when the execution issued ■on said judgment and was levied thereon.

Defendants also alleged that the deed in plaintiff's petition described was not delivered to said Schribar until long after the confirmation of the sale of said premises under the said execution.

The cause was tried to the court, which found generally for the defendants, also specially as follows: “And that the issue raised as to the sheriff’s deed made and executed to J. T. Platt and company by the sheriff of Fillmore •county, pursuant to the order of this court, for the real estate in question in this suit, were all and singular settled and determined in the. proceedings had under the sale therein and the confirmation thereof, and that said deed to J. T. Platt and company is in all respects a good and valid deed; and the court further finds that no delivery for the purpose of conveying title of the deed made the 12th day ■of June, 1882, by George W. Mesarvey and wife to John Schriber was ever had, and that it is, in fact, inoperative and void and can convey no title to the land described therein.” With decree canceling the deed from Mesarvey and wife to Schribar, enjoining plaintiffs from setting up any claim to said land, etc.

There seems to have been no evidence in the case as to when the patent for the land was issued by the United States. So the question of ■ United States homestead, though asserted by the plaintiffs in the petition, was denied by the defendants in the answer, and not being proved on the trial it drops out of the case. The allegation that [629]*629the eighty acre tract of land involved was the exempt homestead of George W. Mesarvey and wife, under the laws of the state then in force at the time of the making and delivery of the title bond by them to the plaintiffs, is alleged in the petition and not denied, though sufficiently proven at the trial.

There wras no issue made in the pleadings as to the confirmation of the sale of the land on defendant’s execution. The fact of such confirmation is alleged in the 'petition, and admitted as alleged by defendants in their answer, with the additional allegation as hereinbefore stated. There was then no propriety in admitting as evidence on the trial the motions to set aside and to confirm’the said sale, nor of the affidavits to sustain, or in resistance of either of such motions, and no finding or judgment could be based thereon. But these papers were admitted not only to prove the so-called judgment of confirmation, but to lay the foundation for proof that one of the plaintiffs paid counsel for resisting such confirmation, and thus proving an estoppel where none had been pleaded.

The land in question was sold on' execution, what was formerly called a fifa. Without a statute requiring it no confirmation of such sale was necessary or known. We have a statute requiring a confirmation in such cases, and such statute should be strictly yet fairly construed. Let us examine the language of the statute and see what construction it will bear. The following is its language, code, § 498 :

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Bluebook (online)
19 Neb. 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schribar-v-platt-neb-1886.