Court Opinion

ID: 7152869
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:03:12.963761+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:15:10.498087
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Judge Lindsay:
It appears that the two judgments upon which the executions issued under which the 34 acres of land were levied upon and sold, were in full force at the time of said levy and sale, and that the application for a new trial in the Smith case was not made until long after Woodson’s purchase.
Whatever rights Woodson acquired under his purchase become vested at the time it was made, and they could not be divested nor impaired by any subsequent litigation between Johns and Smith. At the time of this purchase, Johns recognized the regularity and validity of Smith’s judgment, and actually surrendered to the sheriff in writing the land sold in satisfaction of the same.
To this extent he encouraged Woodson to purchase and he is therefore estopped from controverting the right of his representatives and heirs to take and hold such estate as he acquired under said purchase.
The judgment appealed from permits Johns to redeem, and is certainly as favorable to him as the facts presented by the record could possibly authorize.
If the amount adjudged against him by the court exeeds the aggregate of the two executions, the mistake is a mere clerical misprision which the lower court can correct upon motion from the record itself, and until said court refuses to make the corree*537tion, such mistake cannot be made the ground of reversal in this ourt.

Lee, for appellant.

Judgment affirmed.