Senden v. O'Brien

58 F.2d 689, 61 App. D.C. 137, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4748
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1932
DocketNo. 5387
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 689 (Senden v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Senden v. O'Brien, 58 F.2d 689, 61 App. D.C. 137, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4748 (D.C. Cir. 1932).

Opinion

GRONER, Associate Justice.

Appellees are the daughters of one Irvin E. Jones, who formerly resided in Washington, D. C. The elder of them, Bessie, was born June 16, 1904. Her sister, Myrtle, was bom April 19, 1908. On March 16, 1927, they instituted suit in their own behalf, and, by amendment, as administratrices of the estate of their father, who died in Philadelphia, October 12, 1923. The judge below who heard the ease made certain findings of fact, which are in the record. The evidence was not certified up. A condensed statement of the facts found is about as follows:

Herman W. Van Senden obtained in 1916 a judgment in the municipal court against Irvin E. Jones and Ludwig H. Borner on a promissory note for $250, which he caused to be docketed in the Supreme Court of the District. About two years later a writ of fieri facias issued, as the result of which the marshal levied on three pieces of improved real estate in Washington City belonging to Jones. The marshal appointed two appraisers who estimated the total value of the property seized at $10,000. As Jones had only an undivided half interest in the parcel appraised at $8,000, the value as estimated, of his interest in the property was $6,000. The marshal advertised the property for sale in accordance with the appropriate statute, and at the subsequent sale Van Senden was the only bidder. On the piece of property in which Jones’ interest was appraised at $4,-000, he bid $200; on that in which his interest was appraised at $1,300, he bid $25; and on that in which his interest was appraised at $700, he bid $10. All three properties were knocked down to him for $235. The marshal executed a deed conveying to Van Senden all the right, title, interest, and estate of Jones in and to the three parcels, and Van Senden entered into possession of the property .the latter part of July or the first part of August, 1918. As the sale price did not fully satisfy the judgment' and costs, Van Senden, on June 5, 1923, caused another writ of fieri facias to issue, under which the marshal seized the only remaining property of Jones, valued at about $550, and in the same manner this was put up and sold at public auction,- and bought by Van Senden for $50, but after the bringing of this suit Van Senden voluntarily conveyed this last-named property to appellees, and it is conceded that this transaction has no further part in the issue. The three properties first mentioned were sold by Van Senden, several. years before the suit was instituted, to different buyers for the aggregate amount of $6,790. The rents accruing between the date of the marshal’s sale and the date of his sale were received by Van Senden.

The lower court found that after 1912 and until he left Washington some time in 1918, Jones drank intoxicating liquors to excess, and in the three years between 1915 and 1918 was arrested half a dozen times for drunkenness. In 1913 his wife, Lucy, filed a bill for divorce in the city of Washington, alleging cruelty and drunkenness. A deeree awarding a limited divorce was passed and custody of the two minor children awarded to the mother, and an order entered directing Jones to pay alimony and maintenance in the sum of $50 a month. In June, 1918, a week or 10 days before the sale of Jones’ property to Van Senden, Lucy applied for an order for the appointment of receivers of Jones’ property for the purpose of collecting the rents and applying same in payment of alimony and maintenance then in default. In this proceeding no service was had upon Jones, but the lower court appointed receivers and ordered them to take control and management of the property. A day or two before this order, the sale occurred, and the receivers apparently found Van Senden in possession and therefore nothing on which the order would operate. Shortly before or about this time, Jones disappeared, ceased all communication with his wife and children, and was unheard of again until after his death in Philadelphia in 1923.

After Jones’ death, his widow remarried, and, by the provisions of his will, appellees became entitled to all property of which he died seized. Van Senden died after the present suit was begun, and his administrators were substituted in his place and adopted his answer as their own.

On the 7th of February, 1919, Lucy Jones conveyed to Van Senden her dower interest [691]*691in the property which he acquired at the sale. Evidence of the circumstances under which this transaction occurred were objected to by appellants because of Van Senden’s death, and were not allowed to be shown.

In this state of facts, the court below found, as a conclusion of law, that Van Sen-den had acquired the property fraudulently, and entered a money decree for the selling price of the property with interest, plus the rents with interest, less the $250 judgment, interest, and costs, and the $400 and interest paid to Lucy Jones on account of the conveyance of her dower rights. The court further found that appellees, having been infants during the transactions mentioned above and having brought the suit about a year after the elder and before the younger became of age, were not chargeable with laches.

From what has already been said, it will be seen at a glance that the effect of what was accomplished through the issue of the fieri facias and the sale of the property was to enable Van Senden, for a judgment amounting to $250 obtained against Jopes and another, ■to secure to himself property of Jones’ worth easily at the time $6,500. Such a result is of itself a stigma on the law, and in many of the states of the Union could not Have happened because of statutory prohibitions. In Virginia, for instance, the lien of a judgment against real estate can only be enforced in a court of equity, and the real property itself may not be sold if the rents and profits within five years will be sufficient to satisfy the judgment — in Pennsylvania if within seven years. In Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, New Mexico, Ohio, and Oklahoma, the sale price must equal two-thirds the amount of the appraisement., In other states there is a definite period allowed for redemption, but in all some statutory protection against an unconscionable taking of property for debt. These, or other like provisions and safeguards, we think, are wise and salutary, and might well be made to apply in the District of Columbia.

In the ease under consideration, the rents and profits would have discharged the entire judgment indebtedness in approximately half a year, or, if we accept the unchallenged statement of counsel made in the argument, the redemption offer made by the wife within a few months of the sale would have accomplished the same result, and in both cases the creditor would have got all his rights, and the innocent and helpless would not have suffered.

While it is true the lower court found that there was no active fraud on Van Sen-den’s part, which we understand to mean that the sale was had in the ordinary way and after proper advertisement, it nevertheless found, and we think eorreetly, that the inadequacy of the sale price was so gross as to shock the conscience. Where this is the ease, the invariable practice has been, on proper showing, to set the sale aside. The difficulty in the present ease grows out of the delay in the application.

No principle is better established than that a court of equity will not be active in granting relief in a ease in which a party has slept upon his rights, and ordinarily in order to invoke the aid of the court, conscience, good faith, and reasonable diligence must be shown. Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisp. (4th Ed.) vol. 1, § 419; Hammond v.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 689, 61 App. D.C. 137, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senden-v-obrien-cadc-1932.