Stoney v. Shultz

10 S.C. Eq. 465
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 S.C. Eq. 465 (Stoney v. Shultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoney v. Shultz, 10 S.C. Eq. 465 (S.C. Ct. App. 1834).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

Both parties have appealed from the decree of the Circuit Court, and the grounds stated open for consideration most of the leading points in the cause. I propose to consider them in the order in which they are put down in the brief, beginning with those of the defendants, as going more directly to the merits.

The first and second may be resolved into the general question, whether the mortgage to Brooks and Moore’s judgment can be set up as a lien on the Leigh tract of land generally, and more particularly, whether the mortgage can be set up in opposition to the rights of those who purchased lots from Shultz before the mortgage was ordered to be foreclosed. 1. The very able argument of the Chancellor in support of his views of this question, vindicates, very satisfactorily, his order setting up those liens. I will notice, however, some. of the arguments which have been urged by the counsel in support of this ground of the motion with great apparent confidence. The most prominent are, first, that Williamson having purchased with notice that the sale was premature and irregular, is not entitled to relief: Secondly, That all that Williamson can claim is to be put in the same situation that he would have been if the sale had been regular and valid, and that according to this rule, he would only be entitled to have the mortgage set up against the unsold lands, because the law Court had no authority to order the foreclosure as to the lots which had been sold.

1. The general rule very clearly is, that there is no implied warranty in sales made by a sheriff or other ministerial officer in his official capacity, but that applies exclusively to the quality and property of the thing sold. Thus *in a sale made by a sheriff of goods taken in execution, there is no implied warranty, on the part of the sheriff, that the goods are intrinsically worth anything, or that the defendant has any property in them. He only undertakes to sell the interest which the defendant may happen to have in the goods, in the condition in which they are. .But the principle does not apply to cases where the sheriff or other officer assumes an authority where none is given by law. It will hardly be questioned, that if a sheriff induce persons to purchase at his sales, by pretending that he has the authority of law for the sale, when in truth he has not, the purchaser must be without remedy. It is a fraud for which he would be responsible, and the principle equally applies when he acts upon a void authority. In any case the sheriff is bound to show that he is legally authorized to do that which he assumes to do virtute officii. The case in hand does not entirely depend even on that rule. In his deed to Williamson, the sheriff recites the order of foreclosure of Spring Term, 182Y, the sale on the first Monday in June, thereafter, and the failure of the purchaser to pay the purchase-money according to the terms of the sale, the advertisement of the subsequent sale, and the sale [336]*336to Williamson — and in pursuance thereof he undertakes to convey. ' Here there is an express declaration on the part of the sheriff of his authority to sell, and although it is stated by way of recital, he is as effectually estopped as if it had been in the form of an express covenant. Com. Dig. Estopel, B. 5. Buller N. P. 298. In effect it is a covenant on the part'of the sheriff that he has authority to sell, and the same thing is implied in every sale he makes. Conceding, then, Williamson had notice of the circumstances from which the want of authority to sell has been deduced in the case of Williamson v. Farrow, here is the guaranty of the sheriff against the consequences. One of two persons who are equally confident of their title to the same article of property, undertakes to sell it to a third who knows all the circumstances, and covenants to warrant the title — did any one ever yet suppose that he would not be bound by that warranty. In principle this is that ease. The sheriff, supported by *Brooks the mortgagee, undertook to sell the land; Shultz denied their authority, on the ground that the time for the payment of the money had not passed. Was Williamson obliged to sit in judgment on this controversy, and decide at his peril ? Might not the sheriff covenant for his authority to sell ? And is he not bound ?

2. The authority of the Law Court to order the foreclosure of mortgages on lands is derived from the Act of 1T91, and in that Act there is an express proviso, that nothing therein contained shall extend to any suit or action then pending, “or where the mortgagor shall be out of possession.” But this I regard as wholly unimportant to this branch of the case. The complainants do not ask to have Williamson’s purchase carried into effect. That was adjudged against him in Williamson v. Farrow— he took nothing by the purchase. But upon the principle before laid down, they have the right to ask to be reimbursed the sum which Williamson paid. It is money paid on a consideration which has wholly failed, and upon the plainest principles of common sense and common honesty, they are entitled to recover it back. Primarily the sheriff is liable, because it was he who received the money and guaranteed his authority to sell. Upon the same principle Brooks too is liable, for the sheriff acted under his authority and for his benefit, and paid the amount of the mortgage to him. It seems also that Brooks received it in the capacity of Commissioner in Equity, and in his answer he states that he had paid it over to the persons entitled, and against them he has an unquestionable remedy. The same thing may be said of the amount paid on Moore’s judgment, and the object of this bill is not as the argument supposes — a claim on the part of the complainants to be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee and the judgment creditor, but that the multiplicity and circuity of action which would be necessary in a Court of Law may be avoided and justice done to all the parties at once, that the lands may now be sold to satisfy the mortgage and judgment, in relief of the mortgage and judgment creditor — and it may be asked what wrong is done to the defendants by this mode of ^proceeding. In the end the money due on the mortgage and judgment must be paid, and that is all that is claimed now.

The third and fourth grounds of the defendants’ motion call in question the legality of the order of the Circuit Court setting up the judg[337]*337ments on the Bridge Bank Bills assigned to the plaintiffs, particularly in opposition to the rights of the lot-owners who purchased from Shultz.

The argument in support of these grounds assumes that these judgments were a lien on the Bridge at the time the defendants (the lot owners) purchased from Shultz, and that the release of it by Paul Fitzsimons, operated as a fraud on them, as it operated to exempt a fund primarily liable, and threw the burthen on the individual property of Shultz.

If this assumption was supported by the facts, I should be inclined to think with the defendants’ counsel, that the judgment creditors ought to be left to their remedy against that fund, or having released it, they are without remedy. The judgments were for parnership debts. The Bridge according to this allegation was partnership property and liable to the judgments. The defendants, the purchasers of lots from Shultz, claim that the judgment creditors may exhaust that remedy before they resort to the property purchased by them.

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Related

Bartles v. Livingston
319 S.E.2d 707 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 S.C. Eq. 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoney-v-shultz-scctapp-1834.