Court Opinion

ID: 8003515
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:51:19.133264+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:47.786796
License: Public Domain

Adams, Judge,
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action of ejectment for lands in St. Charles county. The defendants, except Judge, were merely nominal parties, being his tenants, and having no interest in the controversy.
The defendant Judge, by his answer, set up an equitable defense, to the effect that the plaintiff’s title was by sheriff’s deed, at execution sale against the defendant, on a judgment rendered -against defendant in the Circuit Court of St. Louis county, in favor of Charles J. Hess as administrator of Mary Ann Judge; that the plaintiff and Chittenden bought the property at the execution sale, under an agreement with the defendant that they would bid it off for him and give him a bond for title to convey it to him as soon as he refunded the amount bid for it. The property comprehended several thousand acres, and was covered by several deeds of trust, amounting in the aggregate to some $50,000, the whole property comprehended in the deeds of trust being worth more than $100,000. The answer, in effect, set up that at the execution sale there were many persons ready to *539bid, and tbe bidders were induced not to bid by tbe acts and declarations of the plaintiff and Chittenden, creating tbe impression that they were bidding tbe property off for tbe defendant.
Tbe relief prayed for is that tbe sheriff’s deed may be set aside as fraudulent and void, and that the title acquired by tbe plaintiff and Chittenden be vested in defendant.
During tbe progress of this cause in tbe Circuit Court, Chittenden died, leaving bis wife bis sole devisee, who was made a party plaintiff, and afterward compromised with tbe defendant and conveyed to him all tbe interest she held in tbe premises, and on her motion her name was stricken out of tbe case.
On tbe trial, evidence was given conducing to show that thfe alleged agreement set up in tbe answer was made, and evidence on tbe other band that no such agreement bad been made. With other testimony given in tbe cause, tbe defendant introduced as evidence the declarations of Chittenden made to J. C. Orrick, who was a bidder at tbe sheriff’s sale, to tbe effect that be and Griffith bad agreed to buy in tbe land for the benefit of tbe defendant, andat tbe same time appealing to Orrick not to run up tbe land. This was during tbe progress of tbe sheriff’s sale. Orrick at first refused to stop bidding, and Chittenden again appealed to him in tbe same way to stop bidding; that be and tbe plaintiff were buying in tbe land for defendant. Orrick’ thereupon ceased bidding, and proclaimed bis reasons for ceasing to bid. Whether Griffith beard him or not, be did not know; bis action in tbe premises was brought about by tbe acts and declarations of Chittenden. When these acts and declarations of Chittenden were offered in evidence, tbe plaintiff objected on tbe ground that be could not be affected by them, as they were not beard or noticed by him, and would not be evidence to prove tbe alleged agreement with defendant. Tbe Circuit Court found tbe issues for defendant, and decreed to him tbe relief prayed for in bis answer.
Under tbe view we take of this case, it is not necessary to set forth in detail tbe evidence given at the trial. Tbe declarations and acts of Chittenden made during the progress of tbe sheriff’s sale were a part of tbe res gestee. They were made “ dum *540fervet opus” and they were admissible as part of the transaction to show the character of the sale. (Crowther v. Gibson, 19 Mo. 365.) It appears that Orrick, by these acts and declarations of Chittenden,'was induced not to bid, and not only not to bid, but to proclaim to the other bidders what was transpiring; that the purchase would be for the benefit of the defendant.
Now,'whether there was any agreement in fact or not, between the plaintiff and Chittenden and the defendant, about redeeming the land, these acts of Chittenden were calculated to stop the bidding, and did in fact stop it. A purchase, therefore, made under this state of facts, if there had been no agreement at all for redemption, would have been such a fraud upon the sale as to vitiate the title acquired thereby; and if, in fact, there was such an agreement between the plaintiff and Chittenden and the defendant, as is set up in the answer, it ought to be enforced specifically in favor of the defendant. So in any point of view we think the decree of the Circuit Court was right.
Whilst it is the policy of the law to uphold judicial sales where everything is fair and regular, it is at the same time the duty of the courts to protect the parties to an execution sale where there has been a sacrifice of property by interference with bidders. This seems to have been the case here, and on this ground we think this sale was properly set aside. In support of these views we refer to the cases of Neal v. Stone, 20 Mo. 294; Wooton v. Hinkle, 20 Mo. 290; Stewart v. Nelson, 25 Mo. 309.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
The other judges concur.