Wells v. Lenox

159 S.W. 1099, 108 Ark. 366, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 311
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 1099 (Wells v. Lenox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. Lenox, 159 S.W. 1099, 108 Ark. 366, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 311 (Ark. 1912).

Opinion

Kirby, J.

On March 24, 1911, Sledge & Norfleet Company brought suit for the balance due upon a promissory note of S. H. and Addie A. Lenox and to foreclose a mortgage given to secure the payment thereof. At the October term, 1911, a decree was rendered in their favor for $1,844.25, and the property conveyed by the trust deed ordered sold and a commissioner appointed for that purpose. The commissioner advertised the sale for January 22,1912, and on that day sold the real estate for $3,850 to M. Wolchanski, who waived the right to credit and paid the amount of his bid in cash and received from the commissioner a certificate of purchase which he subsequently assigned to J. E. Wells, appellant. The commissioner reported the sale to the April term, 1912, of the court and appellees, S. H. and Addie A. Lenox, filed exceptions to the report.

In February, 1912, appellees, S. H. and Addie A. Lenox, filed a complaint in the chancery court against the purchaser and his assignee, J. E. Wells, alleging that Wolchaski had assigned the certificate to Wells, that the latter had taken possession of the lands before the confirmation of the sale, that a part of the lands sold by the commissioner was not their property but the property of Addie F. Lenox, who was also a party to this suit, that the sale by the commissioner was fraudulent, unjust, inequitable and for a grossly inadequate price, and prayed an order restraining Wells from taking possession and other relief. The temporary restraining order was issued.

J. E. Wells, the assignee of the certificate of purchase, answered that he was the owner of the certificate of purchase issued to Wolchaski, that the property had been abandoned by Lenox at the time of his purchase thereof and that he entered for the purpose of protecting his interests as the holder of the certificate of purchase; denied the alleged right of redemption and that the sale was fraudulent,, unjust, inequitable and for a grossly inadequate price; alleged the existence of a prior mortgage uppn the said land to secure a debt of $4,700, the payment of which he assumed by the purchase thereof and $380 past due interest upon said first mortgage, all of which he was compelled to pay to the holder to protect himself. He also filed an intervention to the original, setting up the same matters.

The suits were consolidated, and upon hearing the chancellor found that no fraud was perpetrated upon appellees, S. H. and Addie A. Lenox, in reference to the sale. That they were by accident and mistake deprived of the opportunity of attending the sale of the land and of the opportunity to procure funds to satisfy the amount due thereon prior to the date of the sale and that the price for which the land sold at' the commissioner’s sale was grossly inadequate.

It ordered the appellees to pay to Sledge & Norfleet Company $1,948.30 and cost, and upon the payment refused to confirm the sale and decreed that it should be set aside. It further directed the court commissioner to pay to appellant, John E. Wells, the $3,850 he had paid for the certificate of purchase for said land. From the decree this appeal comes.

Appellant contends that the court erred in sustaining the exception to the report of the sale and setting aside the same.

From our review of the testimony we are not able to say that the chancellor’s finding that the land sold for a grossly inadequate price is against the preponderance of the testimony. Several of the witnesses testified the lands were worth between $15,000 and $25,000 — some of them placing the value at $20,000, an amount double the price for which they sold; the inadequate price alone, however, would not invalidate the sale. “The rule in reference to judicial sales is that in the absence of fraud and unfairness, mere inadequacy of price, however gross, does not invalidate the sale.” Brittin v. Handy, 20 Ark. 381; Fry v. Street, 44 Ark. 502; Colonial & United States Mortgage Co. v. Sweet, 65 Ark. 152; Sawyer v. Hentz, 74 Ark. 324.

Such, a sale is not complete, however, until confirmation and may be set aside before it is confirmed.

In Wells v. Rice, 34 Ark. 346, the court said: “But until confirmed by the court, a sale made under its decree is not completed and a deed to the purchaser confers upon him no right to the property.

■ “The theory of sales of this character is ‘as the court says in Sessions v. Peay, 23 Ark. 41, ‘that the court is itself the vendor, and the commissioner, or master, its mere agent in executing its will. The whole proceeding, from its incipient stage, up to the final ratification of the reported sale, and the passing of the title to the vendee, and the money to the person entitled to it, is under the supervision of the court. The court will confirm or reject the reported sale, or suspend its completion, as the law and justice of the case may require.’ Ror. on Jud. Sales, § 1; 2 Frem. Void Jud. Sales, § 41.”

And in Greer v. Anderson, 62 Ark. 215, the following :

“Courts may generally be expected to confirm sales which have been conducted according to the directions and upon the terms prescribed by them, unless intervening circumstances should make it unwise or unjust to do so. But they are not compelled to confirm them, and no purchaser at such a sale has the right, to rely absolutely upon the order of the court directing the sale, and the fact that the agent of the court has pursued the terms prescribed in making the sale.”

In The Bank of Pine Bluff v. Levi, 90 Ark. 166, the court said: “Before the confirmation of the commissioner’s sale, irregularities may be shown that the sale was not made in accordance with the provisions of the decree; or any misconduct or unfairness may be shown, in order to set aside such sale. And upon all these matters, the chancery court passes when it makes its decree of confirmation. And from such an order or decree of confirmation an appeal lies. Ror. on Judicial Sales, par. 132.”

It is nevertheless true that the purchasers at such sale acquired rights which can not he disregarded except for sufficient reason. In Robertson v. McClintock, 86 Ark. 255, the court said:

“It is now, however, the settled law of this State, as it is of most of the States, that the highest bidder at a judicial sale, to whom the property has been struck off by the commissioner, acquires vested rights, which must be respected by the court. Colonial & U. S. Mortgage Co. v. Sweet, 65 Ark. 152; Banks v. Directors of St. Francis Levee Dist., 66 Ark. 493; George v. Norwood, 77 Ark. 216.

“Under these decisions, the confirmation is not the sale, but only what the word implies, the approval of something already done. The sale is made by the commissioner. Confirmation only gives the court’s sanction to something that has already taken place, and authorizes the commissioner to execute the deed. The purchaser can not take possession until he receives this, but it will not do to say that a sale which the court must confirm amounts to nothing. If the sale has been unfairly made, or is for a shockingly inadequate price, the owner can object to the confirmation.”

The evidence shows that appellees were and had been long indebted to Sledge & Norfleet Company and that upon the recovery of the judgment and the decree of the sale of the property mortgaged to secure the debt, S. H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 1099, 108 Ark. 366, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-lenox-ark-1912.