Court Opinion

ID: 5547797
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 21:22:24.057409+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:58.040460
License: Public Domain

The Chancellor.
By' the practico oí the English court of chancery it is almost a matter of course to .open the bid-dings on a master’s sale, before the confirmation of his report, upon the offer of a reasonable advance on the amount bid, andi the payment of the costs and expenses of' the purchaser. As a general rule, and advance of ten per cent, is sufficient to - authorize a re-sale. (Garston v. Edwards, 1 Sim. and Stu. 20.) But the biddings will not be opened where the amount of the advance is less than £40. (Farlow v. Wieldon, 4 Mad. Rep. 460.) . The English practice as to opening bid-dings has not been adopted in this state, and it is probably not' desirable., thát it should be introduced here. In Williams, v. Attleborough, (Turner’s Rep; 75,). Lord Eldon says, “ During a period of nearly half a .century which I have passed in this court, and in which Lord Apsley, Lord Thurlow, the Lords Commissioners, with" Lord' Loughborough .at. their head, then'Lord Loughborough as chancellor/ and after. him the Lords Commissioners,- with Chief Baron Eyre, at their head have presided here, I have heard one and all of them lament that the practice of opening biddings was ever intro*101duced. I confess that I have great doubts myself upon the subject; but after a practice so long established, it is not for me to disturb it.” If such are the opinions of English chancellors as to the dangerous tendency of the practice in that country where real estate has, comparatively, a fixed and certain value, a re-sale, ought not to be granted here except in very special cases. In the city of New-York, real estate when sold by a master under a decree or order of this court generally produces its fair value. It is therefore essential to the interests of those whose property is thus sold, that purchasers should continue to retain full confidence in the safety of such purchases; and that they will not, as a matter of course, be disturbed merely because a good bargain has been obtained. And when the court is obliged to order a resale of property purchased in good faith, the former purchaser must be fully and liberally indemnified for all damages, costs and expenses to which he has been subjected.
In Williamson v. Dale, (3 John. Ch. Rep. 292,) Chancellor Kent permitted a re-sale, on grounds which were certainly not stronger in favor of the application than those which are here presented. The property in this case is the sole dependance of two infant children, and has been sold for half its value to pay a debt a little less than the amount of the purchase money. The property was sacrificed, either through the misapprehension, or negligence, of their mother and step father. Immediately after they heard of the sale they made the application to the purchaser to let them redeem the property for the benefit of the infants, and they now offer an advance of more than one thousand dollars on the former bid. If the defendants were adults, and the property had been sacrificed by their own negligence or inattention, I should not disturb the sale ; and now it can only be done on condition that a full indemnity is offered to the former purchaser. The fact that he has agreed with the former tenant of the premises to rent the same to him for two years from May next, does not stand in the way of a re-sale. If it is a mere verbal agreement under which nothing has been done to change the rights of the parties, it is not valid under that provision of the *102revised statutes which requires all leases for more than one year to be in' writing. (2 R. S. 135. § 8.) ' But if the agreement is valid, the" property mu'st'b’e put up and sold, subjgct tQ tjje rjg}jts 0f the lessee.
If, within ten days, the petitioners, or- any other person in their behalf, give sufficient surety to the Satisfaction of the" master, that the premises shall actually produce fifty per cent, advance upon a • re-sale, or if they deposit with the master . within - that time the fifty per cent, advance offered by them, he must put up the property again and re-sell the" same upon • such notice as he may, deem reasonable, not less than one week. .In that case the master is.to pay to the former purchaser, out of. the amount of such advance, the interest . of his deposit and of the whole purchase money which, he has kept on hand, together with all reasonable costs and. expenses which he" has paid or been subjected ■ to in opposing. this application, or in investigating the title. The property ■must also be sold, subject to any rights which the present tenant may have, under the alleged agreement with Turner.