Voss v. Johnson

41 Ind. 19
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 Ind. 19 (Voss v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Voss v. Johnson, 41 Ind. 19 (Ind. 1872).

Opinion

Downey, J.

—This was a proceeding by complaint, instituted by the appellee against the appellant, to set aside a sheriff’s sale of real estate. Issues were formed, there was a trial by jury, verdict for the plaintiff, motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment overruled, and final judgment rendered for the plaintiff, by which the sheriff’s sale and deed were set aside. The defendant appealed, and has assigned for error, first, the overruling of his demurrer to the complaint; second, the refusal to grant him a new trial; and, third, the overruling of his motion in arrest of judgment.

The complaint alleges that the defendant, on the 13th day of April, 1858, obtained a judgment in the Hamilton Cir[20]*20cuit Court, against the plaintiff, for two hundred and eighty-seven dollars and seventy-five cents and costs; that on the 9th day of August, 1862, the defendant caused an execution to be issued on the judgment, and placed in the hands of the sheriff, who, on the 13th day of August, 1862, levied the same on the following real estate of the plaintiff, to wit: The east half of the north-east quarter of section twenty-two, in township nineteen north, of range four east, containing eighty acres; that the real estate was advertised for sale by the sheriff on the 6th day of September, 1862; that said tract of land consisted of two forty-acre lots; that the north forty was partly cleared, and the balance of it was pasture land, at the time of said sale, worth five thousand dollars, and of the annual rental value of five hundred dollars; that the south forty had a good dwelling-house, out-houses, orchard, and barn upon it; that at the time of said sale, said south forty was of the value of eight thousand dollars, and of the annual rental value of two thousand dollars; that the amount required to satisfy the execution was three hundred and sixty-five dollars and twenty-seven cents; that in making sale of said lands, said sheriff first offered the rents and profits of the whole of said lands, for a period of not exceeding seven years, and receiving no bid therefor, he then offered the fee simple of the said north forty; receiving no bid for that, he then fraudulently and in violation of his duty, offered the fee simple of the whole of said lands for sale, without having first offered the fee simple of said south forty; and the defendant bid therefor the sum of three hundred and seventy-five dollars, which was the amount due on said execution, including expenses of said sale; and thereupon said sheriff conveyed said lands to said defendant; and the plaintiff avers that said sheriff wholly failed to offer the rents and profits of each of said tracts separately before or after offering the rents and profits of the whole of said lands as aforesaid. He also wholly failed to offer the fee simple of said south forty before offering the fee simple of the whole, although he well [21]*21knew said lands consisted of said two forty-acre lots at the time he made said levy and sale. It is further alleged that each of said forty-acre lots was susceptible of division into lots of twenty acres; and that twenty acres off either the north or south end of the tract sold would have been much more than sufficient to have satisfied the execution, and could have been reasonably and conveniently detached and sold without damage to the aggregate value of said lands. Prayer that the sale be set aside, etc.

The statute provides, that the estate or interest of the judgment debtor in any real estate shall not be sold on execution, until the rents and profits thereof for a term not exceeding seven years shall have been first offered for sale at public auction; but if the same shall not sell for a sum sufficient to satisfy the execution, then the estate or interest of the judgment debtor shall be sold by vii'tue of the execution. 2 G. & H. 246, sec. 463. The statute also provides, that if the estate shall consist of sevex'al lots, tracts, and parcels, each shall be offered separately; and no more of any real estate shall be offered for sale than shall be necessary to satisfy the execution, unless the same is not susceptible of division. 2 G. & H. 249, sec. 466. We are of opinion that policy requires that sheriffs and execution plaintiffs shall be held to a reasonably strict compliance with these statutes. In the complaint in this case, it is alleged that the real estate in question “consisted of two forty-acre lots,” and it was treated by the sheriff, in the presence of the execution plaintiff at the time of the sale, as consisting of two lots or tracts. He offered for sale the north forty acres separately. If it was a separate lot or tract so was the south forty. With these allegations in the complaint, .admitted by the demurx'er to be true, we must hold, so far as the sufficiency of the complaint is concexmed, that the land consisted of separate lots or tracts, and that it should have been offered as such by the sheriff. The next question is, did the sheriff offer and sell the land as the law requires that he should have done? It is shown that he did not offer the rents and [22]*22profits of each tract separately, but only offered the rents and profits of the whole eighty acres. It also appears that he did not offer the fee simple of the south forty separately, but that after offering the fee simple of the north forty only, he sold the fee simple of the whole eighty acres. We purposely refrain from the expression of any opinion in this case upon the question whether the sheriff was bound to offer the rents and profits of each tract separately, for the reason that the decision of that question is not necessary to the determination of the case. We are of the opinion that the failure of the sheriff to offer the fee simple of the south forty before selling the fee simple of the whole eighty renders the sale invalid. It is argued by counsel for appellant that as the whole eighty acres was sold for only enough to pay the debt, and no one bid anything for the north forty, this proves that the two lots sold separately would have brought no more than they sold for together. We think this argument is not conclusive, to say nothing more of it. It rests upon the assumption that bidders, present at a sheriff’s sale, which is irregular or contrary to law, will bid as much as they will at a sale which is regular and legal. It must be presumed that persons present at such a sale know the law, and what it requires of the sheriff in making such a sale, and that, seeing that the sheriff is making the sale in violation of the law, they would not bid upon the land what they would bid if the sale were regular and in conformity to law. The argument based on the price bid or paid for the land can prove nothing, in such a case as this, as to the regularity of the sale.

At all events, we think, in this case, the sheriff so far departed from the requirements of the law that the sale ought not to stand. If we were in doubt about this, the gross inadequacy of the price would dispel our doubts. According to the complaint, the north forty was worth five thousand dollars, and the south forty eight thousand dollars, making thirteen thousand dollars as the value of the eighty acres. It all sold for three hundred and seventy-five dollars. As [23]*23to the duty of the sheriff to sell real estate in parcels, see Catlett v. Gilbert, 23 Ind. 614, and the cases there cited; also Tyler v. Wilkerson, 27 Ind. 450, and Wright v. Yetts, 30 Ind. 185.

We are referred to the case of Sowle v. Champion, 16 Ind. 165, as an authority in favor of the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Ind. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voss-v-johnson-ind-1872.