Tally v. . Reed

74 N.C. 463
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 74 N.C. 463 (Tally v. . Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tally v. . Reed, 74 N.C. 463 (N.C. 1876).

Opinion

Pearson, C. J.

When this case was before us, January Term, 1875, it was decided that Tally, a purchaser of the land at sheriff’s sale under a fi. fa. against Sossamer, did not acquire a right to the unpaid part of the purchase money. In other words, when a vendor of land retains the title to secure payment of the purchase money, a sale of the land under a ft. fa. against the vendor passes to the purchaser at sheriff’s *464 sale only the naked legal title, and does not vest in him the right to the purchase money.

This principle seemed to us so clear that we decided the case upon the reason of the thing ” and did not consider it necessary to go into an examination of the authorities. Justice Read®, who delivered the opinion, refers to the authorities in a general way, and cites only Moore v. Byers, 66 N. C. Rep., 240, where it is held that if the land be sold under y?, fa. against the vendor, the purchaser does not acquire title to the sale notes, but get only the naked legal estate, and Sprinkle v. Martin, 66 N. C. Rep., 56, where it is held that a mixed trust is not liable to sale under a fi. fa. by the act of 1812.

In the petition to rehear, and upon the argument, Mr. Bailey calls our attention to two old cases which had not been before adverted to, to-wit: Lynch v. Gibson, N. C. Term Rep., 244, and Tomlinson v. Blackburn, 2 Ired. Eq., 509. These two cases bear upon the question and conflict with our decision; so there is sufficient ground to support the application to rehear.

We have given to the question a reconsideration, both upon the principle and upon the cases, and are satisfied there is no error in the decision.

1. Upon principle. Under a fi. fa. the sheriff sells the land of the defendant in the execution. The sheriff has no power to sell notes due to him or a trust estate to which he is entitled. To this an exception is made by the act of 1812, which authorizes a sale under fi. fa. of the trust estate of a vendee who has paid the purchase money in full, but this statute has no application to vendors who have a trust estate in the land to secure the purchase money.

For illustration: A conveys land to B, in trust, to sell and pay certain debts, among others a debt to B. A creditor of B has the land sold under a fi. fa. Upon a judgment against B, the purchaser, at sheriff’s sale, gets the legal title by the sheriff’s deed; but does he get the debt due to B, which is se *465 cured by tlie deed of trust? No, for the debt was not sold, and the sheriff had no power to sell it. So upon proceedings in equity, the land will be sold, the debt of B will be paid to him, and not to the purchaser at sheriff’s sale, and he will not be entitled to receive out of the fund the amount of his bid, for it was his folly to buy a naked legal title; and the residue after the payment of the debts secured by the deed of trust, will be paid to A, the maker of the deed, on his resulting trust.

Again: A lends money to B, and takes his note and a mortgage on land to secure the debt. A creditor of A has the land sold under a fi. fa. The purchaser, by the sheriff’s deed gets the land, but does he get the debt secured by the mortgage? No, for the debt -was not sold. The sheriff had no-power to sell it, and the purchaser gets only the naked legal title. Upon proceedings in equity, B will get back the land, upon payment of the mortgage money, which will be decreed to A, and the purchaser at sheriff’s sale gets nothing — not even the amount of his bid. It was his folly to buy a naked legal title.

Again: A sells land to B on credit, say one, two and three years, takes his notes, retains the title, and gives bond to make title when the purchase money is paid. A holds the land in trust for himself, to secure the payment of the three notes, and then in trust to convoy to B.

Suppose after B pays up the three notes, but before A has conveyed the land to him, a creditor of A, has the land sold under a fi.fa. and the sheriff makes a deed to the purchaser, what passes by the deed ? Only a naked legal title; and B c°u in equity compel the purchaser to convey without paying him the amount of his bid, or allowing him any compensation for his trouble, in buying a naked legal title. Note, in this case under the Act of 1812, a creditor of B could have the trust sold by fi. fa. and the purchaser of the trust gets the legal title by parliamentary magic,- as Blackstone terms it. We- *466 are satisfied that much of the confusion that lias crept into the case is attributable to the fact that the distinction — a trust in favor of a vendee who has paid the purchase money, may be 3old under this Act of 1812, but a trust in favor of the vendor cannot be sold — has not been allowed its full significance.

Suppose after B pays one of his notes, a creditor of A has the land sold under fi fa., what passes by the sheriff’s deed ? a naked legal title, which in the adjustment of the equity will be considered as nothing ; so the decree is for title to the ven-dee, on payment of the two notes, to be made to A and not to the purchaser at sheriff’s sale.

Suppose before B makes any payment, the land is sold as above — the result is the same. The purchaser gets only the naked legal title, and the vendee on payment of the purchase money, not to the purchaser, but to the vendor, is entitled in equity to a conveyance of the land.

These five instances illustrate the principle that a purchaser at sheriff’s sale acquires only the naked legal title, and does not get the debt due to the defendant in the execution or the trust by whieh it is secured — it all rests on the ground that the sheriff has no power to sell the debt or the trust.

Here note a diversity; the defendant in the execution has power to sell the debt, and the trust, whereas the sheriff" has no such power. A want of attention to this diversity explains the confusion in the cases.

For illustration — in the first instance stated above, the trustee has power to convey the land and also his debt; if the purchaser has notice, the other cestui que trust may compel him, in equity, to give up the land ; but he is allowed in the adjustment of equties to retain the debt due to the trustee, on the assumption of the express assignment of the debt, or an assignment implied, in order to prevent fraud, as some compensation for the loss of the land. If the purchaser bought •without notice, he keeps the land and the other cestui *467 que trust are left to their remedy against the trustee for the breach of trust.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.C. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tally-v-reed-nc-1876.