Yoder v. Atterburn

23 Ky. 478, 7 T.B. Mon. 478, 1828 Ky. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 1, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 Ky. 478 (Yoder v. Atterburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yoder v. Atterburn, 23 Ky. 478, 7 T.B. Mon. 478, 1828 Ky. LEXIS 145 (Ky. Ct. App. 1828).

Opinions

Judge Mills

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Thomas Philips obtained' four judg-. ments and executions, against Elisha Standiford;. and Samuel Churchill obtained two against the same person. These six executions were all in the hands of the sheriff at the same time, and were levied by him, on one tract of 1500 acres of land, also another tract of about 300 acres, being the mansion farm of said Standiford, also a third tract of fifty acres, a fourth tract of 108 acres, ten slaves, four feather beds .and furniture, a wagon and team of five horses with their harness, three other riding horses, forty head of cattle, fifty sheep, fifty hogs, one press, [479]*479one secretary, one desk, three tables, and a clock; all of the estate of said Standiford, and given up by himto satisfy said executions, which were all endorsed, that paper of the bank of the commonwealth would be accepted in payment.

Sheriff’s sa!e, and conveyance to Yoder; and property left in debtor’s possession. Bill of D. Standiford, and of Massie and Atterburn, other creditors, alleging the sheriff’s sale fraudulent, and' praying the estate to be subject to their judgments. Answers.. Decree of the circuit court. Yoder and 3£. Standiford’s writ of error.

The estate was sold on the 15th June, 1823, for the sum of 3,708 dollars, and Jacob Yoder became the purchaser, and all was conveyed to him by the sheriff in one inclusive deed, which was acknowledged and recorded on the 7th of November, 1823.

The estate all remained in the possession of the debtor, and was not removed.

On the 13th of July, 1Ó24, David Standiford, another creditor, who also had a judgment and execution, and in the month of September following, Henry Massie, and Harrison Atterburn, who were also creditors by judgment and execution, each filed their separate bills in equity, charging that this sale and purchase of the property by Yoder, were made with intent to delay, hinder, and defraud -creditors, and to the great sacrifice of the estate, which was of far greater value; and that it was designed to save the estate for the benefit of Standiford, and was therefore fraudulent and void; and praying that the said sale might be set aside, and tire estate be again exposed to sale, in discharge of their respective demands.

Yoder, and Elisha Standiford, answered each bill, and contested tbe fraud, and contended that the sale was fair and bona Jidc.

The cases were ordered to be tried together.

The court below decreed, that the estate should be re-sold, under the direction of the court, by commissioners; and that Yoder should have the preference in having his claim satisfied; that is, the price which he gave for the property at the sheriff’s sale; and that each of the others should follow in succession, giving the preference to the one which had his execution first endorsed by the sheriff.

To reverse these three decrees, Yoder and E. Standiford have prosecuted their three writs of error.

A tterburn’s, D. Standiford’s and Massie’s writs of error. Ground of complaint by Yoder and E. Standiford against the decree. ■Grounds relied cm by D. Standiford, Massie, and Atterburn. Fair purchaser, at sheriff’s sale, under a contract with the defendant that he may redeem, holds vis in mortgage, and another credit- or may maintain his bill to redeem, or have a sale' and appropriation of the proceeds. where the chancellor fraudulent conveyance, on the comPJ®int of a ^editor \ie ouscht to’ order the sale, effected'Vnd not torn the party back to p^°£mm°a tion.

[480]*480And the three creditors, David Standiford, Massie, and Atterburn, have each prosecuted their several writs of error, against Yoder and E. Standiford. All t!iese cases have been heard together in this court.

1. Yoder, and E. Standiford now contend that the sale was fair, and not made to defraud creditors, in any way; and that, therefore, the decree selling the estate is erroneous.

2. That if a sale is to take place on any terms, it ought not to be made by a commissioner or master •in chancery, under the direction ofThe court; but that all the chancellor could do, would be to remove the incumbrance on the estate, and let loose the executions at law.

On the contrary, D. Standiford, Massie, and Atterburn, contend that the sale, and deed made by the sheriff, in pursuance thereof, is fraudulent, and ought to have been held for nought, and that the court erred in settling the question of precedence between the parties; and that Yoder ought to be postponed to the whole.

The most favorable light in which this transaction between Yoder and E. Standiford, whereby the title through the sale by the sheriff was acquired in all E. Standiford’s property, can be viewed, is to construe it into a mortgage. For however fair the sale might have been, it is in proof that by previous arrangement E. Standiford was to be allowed to redeem the estate, and a writing shewn by the defendants themselves, entered into after the sale, which will be hereafter more particularly noticed, also proves that E. Standiford was to be allowed to redeem or take the estate again at the end of four years. If then the arrangement is construed into a ■mortgage, it was competent for creditors by judgment and execution, to bring their bill to be let in to redeem or to compel the mortgagee to foreclose, or that the estate should be sold and the proceeds be applied, first to extinguish the claim of the mortgagee, and the residue to go to the creditors so suing. Indeed the decree rendered by the court below. [481]*481goes no further in its operation than a decree of this character. The title of Yoder is ordered to staiid as an indemnity in his favor; or rathgr, he has the preference given him, in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale, for all the money which he had actually expended in making the purchase.

Main question .Rated, Facts relied on to prove the sheriff’s sale fraudulenti

We will not detain to discuss the question of power in the chancellor to set up this estate at auction, under his own order, and in the hands of his own officer. For we deny that his power, when he has fair possession of a subject, stops short of complete justice, and that he is bound to drop the subject just at the very point of relief, and call to his aid the process or functionaries of a court of common law, to help him,out of the dilemma. . On the contrary, he can generally complete what he begins, and particularly if a sale is necessary fori the ends of justice, he will direct and superintend it. Toa sale thus directed, under his immediate direction, and subject to his immediate revision, there is generally, and ought to be, greater confidence given, than is to those of a court of common law, which are conducted by ministerial officers only, and afterwards do not receive judicial confirmation or approbation on the heaving of the parties, unless one of them shall move to set it aside.

The main question, therefore, in this cause, must be, is this title acquired by Yoder, fraudulent, and made with intent to delay, hinder, and defraud creditors?

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Related

Realty Purchase Corp. v. Fisher
216 N.C. 197 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ky. 478, 7 T.B. Mon. 478, 1828 Ky. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yoder-v-atterburn-kyctapp-1828.