Opinion
December Term, 1856.
The claim which a purchaser at sheriff's sale has against the defendant in an execution, on account of a defective title, is but a simple contract debt, and an executor who pays such a claim in preference to a judgment creditor, is guilty of a devastavit.
A purchaser at sheriff's sale, who gets a defective title, has no right to take the place of the creditor by substitution, and thus bring to his aid the dignity of such creditor's debt.
Equity never interferes against creditors.
APPEAL from the County Court, tried before PERSON, Judge, at the Fall Term, 1856, of Orange Superior Court.
The plaintiffs were judgment creditors of Porter Thompson, and after his death, sued out a warrant upon their judgment against the defendant, his executor, and obtained judgment for their debt; but the defendant suggesting a want of assets on the trial before the magistrate, the case was sent to the County Court to try that question. The issue was submitted to a jury in the County Court, who gave a verdict for the plaintiffs, from which the defendant appealed to the Superior Court.
In the Superior Court it was referred to the clerk to state an account of the defendant's administration, which he did, and on the coming in of his report, various exceptions were filed by the plaintiffs' counsel, all of which were overruled, except the fifth, which was founded on the following facts: The defendant produced to the commissioner, as vouchers, two judgments, in favor of A. Borland, amounting to $125,90. The plaintiffs excepted, and proved that the sheriff had paid the money on these judgments into Court; also, that a surplus of $149,21, arose on the sale of certain property, which the sheriff paid into the hands of the defendant as executor, and both the payment to Borland, and this sum of $149,21, are sought to be charged against the defendant. Borland's executions, on these judgments, had been levied on a tract of land, as the property of Porter Thompson, which was sold to one Latimer, under a venditioni exponas based on these levies, and brought $290; of this money, the sheriff paid $125,90 into Court, which the clerk paid to Borland, and the remainder, to wit, $149,21, he paid to the defendant. Subsequently, it was discovered that Porter Thompson had no title to the land sold by the sheriff, and Latimer demanded that his money should be refunded by the defendant as executor, which, under advice of counsel, he did, to wit, the $290, paid by Latimer to the sheriff. Whereupon, the defendant insists, that, as he was liable, in law, to Latimer, and could have been compelled to pay back to him the money he had paid for this defective title, he might do so without suit; that what he did, amounted to a rescission of the sale, and therefore, in law, the Borland debt was paid by him.
The plaintiffs contended, that Latimer's claim for his money was only a simple contract debt, and that as their's was of a higher dignity, it had the preference over Latimer's; of which opinion was his Honor, who sustained the exception, and the defendant appealed.
Bailey and Fowle, for plaintiffs.
Graham, for defendant.
Prior to the Act of 1807, Rev. Code, ch. 45, sec. 27, a purchaser at execution sale, had no remedy, either in Law or Equity, if he lost the property by reason of a defect in the title of the defendant in the execution. The officer sold only the interest of the debtor, and the purchaser bid for it at his own risk. There was no warranty, expressed or implied.
The Act referred to, gives the purchaser a remedy by an action on the case against the defendant in the execution, in which he may recover the amount of the purchase money with interest. There is nothing, however, in the statute which puts this "chose in action" above the dignity of a simple contract debt.
We consequently concur in opinion with his Honor in the Court below, that, as against these plaintiffs, the defendant was chargeable with the sum of $149,21, being the excess of the purchase money, after deducting the amount of the executions under which the sale was made, which sum was paid to him by the sheriff, and that the judgments in favor of Borland, which had been paid off by the proceeds of the sale, were not vouchers for the defendant.
In respect to the $149,21, that amount was received by the defendant as executor, for, and on account of, the estate of his testator, and, except by force of the statute above referred to, the purchaser could not compel him to repay it; so its repayment was an attempt on the part of the defendant to give the purchaser a preference over creditors of a higher dignity, and amounted to a devastavit.
In respect to the judgments in favor of Borland, they were satisfied, and extinguished by the money made at the execution sale, notwithstanding the defect in the title of the property sold ( Halcombe v. Loudermilk, 3 Jones' Rep. 491) and being thus satisfied, could not afterwards be made use of by the defendant, although he had refunded the money to the purchaser.
It was said, in the argument, that under the doctrine of substitution, the purchaser might have taken the place of the judgment creditor, and compelled the defendant to pay the amount, and the defendant was at liberty to do, without suit, what he could have been compelled to do. This is an application of the doctrine of substitution which is not sustained by any authority. Scott v. Dunn, 1 Dev. and Bat. Eq. 425, does not support it. There the land was liable for the debt, and the heir took back the land; it was held that the purchaser ought to be substituted in place of the creditor, so as to have a lien on the land in the hands of the heir; because, by paying the creditor, he had relieved the land to that amount. So there is no analogy.
The reason of the thing does not bring a purchaser at sheriff's sale within the principle of substitution. There is no kind of privity between him and the creditor. He buys the interest of the debtor, in the property sold, without warranty, at his own risk, and for his own gain. If the title is good, well; if it is not good, what is there to entitle him to take the place of the creditor? But suppose, as between him and the debtor in the execution, or his personal representative, the doctrine of substitution did apply, (if it does, it is singular that some case prior to 1807 cannot be found,) the aid of that doctrine is here invoked against creditors. It is well settled that Equity never interferes against creditors; for instance, if a surety on a bond pays the amount, although Equity will substitute him to the creditor, so as to give him the benefit of all securities, it will not put him in the situation of a specialty creditor, so as, by substitution, to enable him to divide the fund with specialty creditors; because, that would be interfering against creditors. Here the attempt is to give the simple contract creditor priority over judgment creditors.
PER CURIAM. Decree below affirmed.