Court Opinion

ID: 7135755
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:23:42.528528+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:37.345074
License: Public Domain

*404Opinion of tiib court by
JUDGE HOBSON
Reversing.
D. B. Weaver died a resident of Livingston county, and his administrator brought this suit to sell the land 'owned by him for the payment of debts, and for the settlement of his estate. At the April term, 1903, a judgment was entered directing a sale of the real estate. The sale was made on June 1st, and at it appellant, R. B. Cowper, bid in lots 67, 68, 69, 70, and a part of lot 17, for $265. After the sale he seems to have concluded that the title of the intestate to the land was not good, and refused to execute a bond for the price. The commissioner on September 9th filed his report of sale, stating that Cowper had purchased the property at the sale, and had refused to execute a sale bond. On this report on September 25th the court, without taking any proceedings against Cowper or confirming the sale, entered the following order: “It appearing to the court by report of the master commissioner, W. I. Clarke, that he sold to R. B. Cowper lots 67, 68, 69, 70, and 71, and a part of outlot No. 17, as appears on the town plat of Smithland, Kentucky, and said Cowper’ having failed and refused to execute bonds iherefor, and said fact being made known to this court as aforesaid,- the said commissioner is here dii’ected to treat said sale to Cowper as if it had not been made, and readvertise said property for sale, and sell same in the full] way and manner set out and directed in the judgment filed herein, and will in all respects comply wiih .said judgment in taking bond, mailing report, and so forih and so on, as herein set out; and this cause is continued.” The resale was made on November 2, 1893, and at it the property brought the sum of $32. Thereupon, at the December term of the court, the court awarded a rule against Cowper to show cause, if any he could, why he should not pay the difference between the bid made by him and the bid made at the second sale, which *405the court then confirmed. Appellant, Cowper, in response to this rule, set out that the intestate had no title to the property, and also relied on various irregularities in the proceedings. He also set up the order above quoted, by which the sale to him was ordered to be treated as a nullity, and pleaded it in bar of the rule, in connection with the subsequent orders of the court confirming the second sale, and conveying the property to the purchaser thereat.
In Makemson v. Brann, 37 S. W., 495, 18 Ky. Law Rep., 584, the commissioner sold a tract of land, and, the purchaser failing to execute bond, readvertised the property, and made a second sale at the next county court. He then reported to the court, both the sales. The court confirmed the second sale, and ordered the property conveyed to the purchaser. After this a rule was taken out against the purchaser at the first sale to show cause why he should not pay the deficiency. It was held that he was not liable. The court said: “While an accepted bidder at a judicial sale who fails to comply with his bid may, by proper proceedings, be required to pay the damage resulting from such failure, which would include the difference between the bid, if any, and. the amount realized on the final sale, if the property sold for less) on that sale than at-the former sale, yet, where the commissioner has elected to treat the bid as a nullity, and has proceeded to advertise and resell the property, and the second sale has been confirmed without objection, it is -then too late to proceed against the first purchaser for failure to comply with the terms of the sale.” The commissioner, in making the sale, is the agent of the court. His powers are limited by the orders of the court. He has no power to treat a sale as a nullity, and in the case cited the judgment of the court turned, not on the action of the commissioner, but on the order of the court confirming the action of the commissioner, for *406the act of the agent amounted to nothing until it was ratified by the court. The commissioner is simply ordered to sell the property. He is without power to release the purchaser from his obligation. The'liability of the purchaser depends upon the action of the court. In the case at bar the court ordered the sale to be treated as a nullity. He directed the land to be resold, and when» that sale was made', he confirmed it and directed the property to be conveyed to the purchaser. The purchaser at the first sale was only a preferred bidder until his bid was accepted by the court by confirming the sal1©. The contract was not complete, and when the court decided not to confirm the sale, but to treat it as'though it had not been made, the purchaser stood simply as any other person who makes a proposition which is not accepted. When the purchaser fails to execute his bond1, it may be that the parties prefer another sale, thinking that the property will sell for more, and in this event the court may so order without taking any proceedings against the purchaser. But if it is desired to hold the purchaser, then his bid must be accepted by the court, and if he still refuses to give the bond, a resale may be ordered, or the purchaser may be dealt with as in cases of contempt; and in tins state of case, if the land on the second sale sells for more than on the first, the surplus will belong to the purchaser. The court can not, however, treat the sale, as a nullity, and thus keep the surplus, if the land on the second sale sells for more than on the first, and at the same time hold the purchaser responsible for the deficiency if on the second sale it sells for less. In Shirley v. Shewmaker’s Assignee, 63 S. W., 11, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 452, [he first sale was confirmed by the court and a rule was taken against the purchaser to show cause why hé should not give bond, which was made absolute. Brassfield v. Burgess, 10 S. W., 122, 10 Ky. Law Rep., 660, is in effect the .same, and *407so is Tyler v. Guthrie, 33 S. W., 934, 17 Ky. Law Rep., 1193. But in none of the cases is the court allowed to treat the sale as a nullity, and still proceed to hold the purchaser liable.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with directions to discharge the rule against appellant