Court Opinion

ID: 7037431
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 06:46:57.1785+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:11:12.671540
License: Public Domain

Elliott, C. J.
— This was, in the first instance, a suit between the appellants for partition. The real estate being incapable of division without detriment to the interests of. the parties, it was ordered to bo sold, and was sold by a commissioner to the appellees. "When the report of sale was made, the appellees, without any notice to the appellants and in their absence, filed exceptions to the confirmation of the sale. Thereupon the commissioner and the appellees made issues, and upon trial thereof there was an order entered setting aside the sale.
■ It is contended that there was no final judgment, and that this appeal should therefore be dismissed. This is a mistake. The purchasers sought to set aside the contract of sale in this very novel method, and thereby relieve themselves of its obligations. They sought nothing more. As to them, the order was a final judgment, if valid at all. They had no further case in court, and they could not have any possible interest in the subsequent proceedings. Their exceptions must be regarded as a complaint against the parties in interest to rescind the the contract, and the order setting aside the sale as a final judgment of rescission. True, their proceedings were irregular, and probably without pre*62cedent, but that was their own fault, and they can derive no advantage from it. An independent suit to annul the contract of purchase would be a proper method of obtaining the relief sought. This ought not to be injected into the partition suit, or sought to be made a part of it. We think that the appeal is well brought.
L. M. Campbell and J. V. Hadley, for appellants.
C. C. Nave, for appellees.
The appellants, not having appeared or paid any attention to the exceptions of the purchasers, (appellees,) of course did not except to any ruling of the court below, and it is urged that there is, consequently, no question in the record for our consideration. This also is a position in which we cannot concur. When the complaint fails to aver enough to constitute a cause of action, the objection to the judgment for the plaintiff niay be first made in this court upon appeal. 2 G. & H. § 54, p. 81. The complaint, (the exceptions to the confirmation of the sale being regarded as the complaint,) is subject to this objection. It contains scarcely anything which is necessary to make a case. For this reason, the order setting aside the sale must be reversed.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.