Court Opinion

ID: 7362088
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:48:00.394802+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:40.192397
License: Public Domain

DENSON, J.
This is the second appeal in this case. The appeal now, as was the former one, is from an interlocutory decree adjudging the plea interposed by the defendant insufficient. The facts of the case as made by the bill and the plea are set out in the report of the case in 141 Ala. 434, 38 South. 181. The reporter will take the facts as there set out.
After the decree of the chancellor was affirmed the defendant amended his plea by averring that the register, on the 20th of July, 1903, reported the sale of the lands made under the decree of the chancery court. This amendment does not vary the facts of the case in any material particular from what they were as presented by the record on the former appeal, there being no averment • in the plea that the register’s report of the sale was ever confirmed by the corfrt. So the question now before us for determination is the same as it was on the former appeal, and the answer to it must be the same, unless the court recedes from the decision then made.
The insistence of the appellant is that the appellee, having bid at the sale made by the register under the decree of the supreme- court an amount more than sufficient to satisfy that decree, into which the judgment of the circuit court was merged, and having paid the difference in cash and received a deed to the land purchased from the register, could not thereafter use the *235judgment or decree for the purpose of redeeming* under tbe statute allowing judgment creditors the privilege of redemption. This insistance proceeds upon the theory that the appellee’s purchase operates an irrevocable satisfaction of the judgment and decree. This is undoubtedly the rule applicable to purchasers at execution sales, and was so recognized by us in the opinion handed down when the case was here before. But we held that the rule did not apply to this case for the reason that the sale at which the appellee purchased — the register's sale — was a judicial sale, to perfect which required a report to be made to the court and a confirmation of that report by the court, and without which the judgment against Caffee was not satisfied. — McGaugh v. Deposit Bank of Frankfort, 141 Ala. 434, 38 South. 181.
It is now insisted that in reaching the conclusion the court omitted consideration of the case of Jones v. Burden, 20 Ala. 382. The case was not considered by the court, and it seems to have been overlooked by counsel also. In that case William Jones, as‘executor of Cheesborough, filed his bill in the chancery court to foreclose a mortgage executed by John Moyrant and wife on certain real estate. A decree of foreclosure was rendered by which the register was directed to sell the land in the same manner that sheriffs are required by law to sell real estate. At the sale Jones (the executor) and one Blair became the purchasers. The register executed to them a deed and they took possession of the land; but the sale was never confirmed, nor did the register ever report the sale. The amount bid at the sale was credited on the mortgage debt and a balance remained unpaid. Burden, who was a judgment creditor of John Moyrant, made the proper tender to Jones & Blair and filed his bill to redeem. The right to redeem was resisted on the ground that the sale was not perfect and complete, because it had never been confirmed by the chancellor. The court, speaking through Chief Justice Dargan, said: “In England a bidder cannot be considered as the purchaser until the sale has been confirmed *236by the chancellor; for until then the property is not at his risk, and. if it be destroyed in the interim between the bidding and the confirmation he cannot be compelled to take it. But a practice has grown up in this state different from the practice in England. There the bid is reported by the master to the court of chancery, but-the purchase money is not paid, nor any conveyance executed to the purchaser, until the report of the master is confirmed; but here the purchase money is paid to the register-at the time of the bidding, and he, unless directed by the order of sale to the contrary, then executes and delivers to the purchaser a deed for the premises. This was the course pursued in the case before us, and the purchasers obtained possession of the land, and have occupied it ever since; and if we were to hold that.it required a confirmation of the sale to render them purchasers, they have it in their power forever to prevent a judgment creditor of the mortgagor from redeeming, for they may decline to have the sale confirmed, and a judgment creditor has no power to compel them, and thus, from their own neglect in not procuring a confirmation of their purchase, they would reap a benefit. We think that, under the practice in this state we must hold the purchase complete from the time the bidder pays the purchase money, and receives a conveyance from the register. FTom that period the property is at his risk, and he could not repudiate the purchase for any thing afterwards intervening.”
It would seem from the foregoing extract that the case conflicts with the former opinion in this case. But Chief Justice Dargan said in explanation of the foregoing : “It is not, however, to be inferred that we intend to hold that the bidder, by paying the amount bid and receiving a conveyance, obtains an indefeasible title without confirmation; for the practice is well settled, that the sale may be set aside before confirmation, for improprieties or irregularities in the sale. 'All that we intend to say is, that when the decree authorizes the register to receive the amount bid, and make a conveyance,. the bidder must be considered as the purchaser *237from the time he receives a cleecl.” It will be noted, too, that the court in that case laid stress on the fact that the purchasers were in possession of the land. In the case of Witter v. Dudley, referring to the case of Jones v. Burden, through Byrd, J., the court said: “In the case of Jones v. Burden, Dargan, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the court, says: ‘All that we intend to say is that when the decree authorizes the register to receive the amount bid and make a conveyance, the bidder must be considered as the purchaser from the time he receives a deed.’ In this we concur; but to some of the expressions in that opinion, prior and subsequent to the above extract, we do not assent, but consider it as explanatory of, and as limiting, those expressions.” Witter v. Dudley, 42 Ala. 616. So it would seem that the case of Jones v. Burden, has been in some respects considered of doubtful authority.
However this may be, the sale at which the appellee in this case purchased was not a sale under: execution on a decree; but the sale was made under, a decree •which condemned the specific property that was sold, to be sold by the register to obtain money with which to satify appellee’s claim or judgment. It was essentially a judicial sale in which the court in legal effect was the seller. Such a sale is unlike a sheriff’s execution, which is a ministerial, and not a judicial act, and in making which the law regards the officer, ancl not the court as the vendor. The fact that the decree directed that the register, in advertising and selling the lands, should proceed- in the manner prescribed by law for sale of lands levied on under execution, cannot be construed as changing the nature of the sale. In other words, it cannot be construed as making the register or the complainant the vendor. This only requires and authorizes the register to advertise the land in the manner and for the length of time that is required by the statute applicable to execution sales and to sell at public auction at the courthouse. There is no other significance to be attached to it. And since the adoption of the code of 1896, it may be doubtful as to the authority *238of the register at such a sale in the absence of express authority, given by the decretal order of sale, to make a deed to the purchaser before confirmation.
Section 3208 of the code of 1876,’ which provides that, “when real estate, or any interest therein, has been sold by any sheriff, register in chancery, or commissioner appointed by any decree of the chancery or probate court to make sale of real estate or any interest therein, such sheriff, register or commissioner, upon compliance by the purchaser with the terms of sale * * i:' must execute a deed to the purchaser,” etc., was amended by the adoption of the code of 1896, and the section as it stands in that code only applies to sales made by the sheriff. — § 2917 (3208) code 1886. Section 2917 was carried into the code of 1896 as it stood in the code of 1886. — Code 1896, § 1914 (2917) (3208).
While, under the facts of the case at bar, the appellee might be considered a purchaser in the sense that the register could report him as such in his report of the sale to the court, yet the sale being a judicial one and it completion necessarily depending upon confirmation of the sale bjr the court, before there is confirmation, it would seem to be an illogical conclusion to hold that the purchase by the appellee was a satisfaction of the decree in its favor.; — McEachin v. Warren, 92 Ala. 554, 9 South. 197; Phillips v. Benson, 82 Ala. 500, 2 South. 93; McGaugh v. Deposit Bank, 141 Ala. 434, 38 South. 181. Confirmation being a necessary step in the completion of the sale and not being averred in the plea, we again conclude that the decree of the chancellor holding the plea insufficient is correct; and adhering to the conclusion reached on the former appeal, a decree will be here rendered affirming the decree of the chancery court.
Affirmed.
Weakley, C. J., and Haralson and Dowdell, JJ. concur.