Tate v. . Greenlee

15 N.C. 149
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 N.C. 149 (Tate v. . Greenlee) 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
Tate v. . Greenlee, 15 N.C. 149 (N.C. 1833).

Opinion

*150 CrASTON, Judge.

After stating the case proceeded:

The act in question is in these words. “ that ail contracts to sell or convey any lands, tenements or herc- ditaments, or any interest in or concerning them, or “any slave or slaves, shall be void and of no effect, un- less such contract, or some memorandum or note there- of. shall be put in writing, and signed by the party to he charged therewith, or some other person by him the re to lawfully authorised, except nevertheless contracts for leases not exceeding in duration the term of three “ years.” The question whether this enactment applies to sales on execution, has we understand, occurred before on the circuit, and the decisions have been in conformity to that now under review. This however, is the first time in which this court has been called on to examine the question, and we have considered it with the attention due to its practical importance.

It must then be admitted that the words used in the beginning of the act, are sufficiently comprehensive to embrace every contract, by whomsoever it may be made. But there are expressions in the act by no means appropriate to the case of a judicial sale, and tending to show that such sales were not within the contemplation of the Legislature at the time of making this enactment. To give validity to the contract it is required that the same, or some memorandum or note thereof, should be signed by the Qlirtij to be charged therewith, or by liis authorised ageit# Now in judicial sales who is the party to be charged as vendor ? Can the sheriff be regarded as such a party ? The sheriff is a public officer, acting in obedience to an execution commanding him, in tlie name of the State, to cause to be made of the property of a delinquent debtor, a sum of money judicially ascertained to t>e due to his creditor, A levy by the sheriff on the land of the debtor, divests neither the possession, nor the estate of the debtor. In making the sale the sheriff acts as a minister of the law, in obedience to its mandate, and in execution of the authority which that mandate confers upon him over the property of the debtor. The State — or the law — sells by its age'nt the sheriff. ' By a *151 levy on slaves, he takes the possession, and acquires such an interest as will enable him to maintain an action of Trover, Detinue or Trespass against a wrong doer; but he takes this possession and special property as a bailee, in order to effect the requisitions of the law, and when he sells, the contract is not for the transfer of this special property, but for the transfer of the entire interest of the debtor, which the law orders to be converted, into money, for the satisfaction of the judgment creditor.— In all such sales therefore, the law is the vendor, and and so much of the enactment as requires that the contract shall be signed by the party to be charged therewith, cannot in such cases, apply to the vendor. Nór without violence to the ordinary import of language, can the law be spoken of as “ the party to he charged with the execution of a contract.”

Upon a little reflection it cannot but be seen that great inconveniences must arise by regarding the sheriff, if he could be so regarded, as the party to be charged as the vendor. If it be so, then ho may lawfully refuse to execute a deed to the purchaser, after the sale and receipt of the purchase money, nay after its payment into court, and the actual satisfaction of the judgment, unless the purchaser can exhibit writen evidence of the contract signed by the sheriff, or by his lawfully authorised agent. And it is not easy to perceive how he can be made liable either civilly or criminally, for refusing to execute a contract which the law authorises him to treat as void and of no effect. It is highly improbable that the Legislature intended that the sheriff should have an arbitrary discretion to make a title, or not to make a title to the purchaser — and if he be the party to he charged he must have this discretion, because he is not hound to avail himself of this legal objection, but may like every party sought to be charged, waive it if he pleases. Should he refuse to make title, it is plain that vast confusion must arise, although it may be difficult to pronounce what will be the precise effects of this confusion on the plaintiff and the defendant in the execution, on the purchaser, or on the property. No apprehension of inconvenience- will *152 prevent this court from giving full effect to every cott-stitutional expression of the legislative will, but the ar-gumont from inconvenience ought to have great* weight jn endeavoring to ascertain that will, when couched in general terms. Nor can I resist the conviction, that if the Legislature intended to vest the sheriff with so dangerous a power, it would have laid down some rule by which the consequences resulting from its exercise would be defined, instead of leaving them to bo inferred by judicial conjecture.

These considerations lead me to the result that the sheriff cannot claim the protection of this act against a purchaser at an execution sale, paying the price of hiS purchase, and demanding a conveyance. He cannot, because such a sale is not within the meaning of the act. The converse of the proposition necessarily follows, neither can the purchaser set up this act, as a bar to the demand of the sheriff for the purchase money, the sheriff tendering a conveyance of the property. The object of the statute was to prevent frauds and perjuries, in cases where the value of the property might present strong temptations, and the variety and complexity of the contracts afford scope and facility for the commis-.gion of these crimes. Bargains between individuals, created solely by the convention of the parties, are susceptible of innumerable modifications, which may be indistinctly expressed, imperfectly understood, partially remembered, or wilfully misrepresented. The thing bought and sold, and its price, do not constitute all or the greater part, and frequently even not the most important part of such contracts. Is there to be any warranty of title, and if so to what extent ? Does the vendor stipulate as to the qualities of the thing conveyed ? Is he to deliver possession immediately, or at a future day, and then absolutely, or upon some condition ? Is the price to be paid down, or before a title is made ? If not to be paid down, when, and upon what instalments is it to be paid, and what security is to be given to ensure its payment ? All who are conversant with judicial proceedings know that questions like these, tq be decided on

*153 Several decisions made by courts of the highest respectability in the State of New-York have been referred to by the counsel for the defendant as showing that a similar enactment in their statute of frauds has been construed to apply to judicial sales. But on examining these cases, it will be found that they do not establish this position.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.C. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-greenlee-nc-1833.