Snyder v. Clark
Snyder v. Clark
Opinion of the Court
The defendant is administrator of O. W. Craig, deceased. Craig, in his lifetime, and Franklin Sears as sureties, had with G. C. P. Sears as principal made two promissory notes to one Wiclcersham for something over $4,000; and on December 9, 1889; Wickersham had recovered judgment on said notes against all three of said persons for $4,280.40 and costs. The plaintiff herein and said Franklin Sears had
The said Franklin Sears was the father of the plaintiff, Mrs. Snyder, and it is averred in the complaint (substantially) that she proposed to Craig that she would pay her father’s half of said balance of $2,010, for which she was not liable, if he, Craig, would pay the other half; that Craig assented to the proposition, but said that he would not have any ready money for a short time, and agreed and promised that if she would also pay his half and satisfy the judgment, he would pay to her his half, to wit: $1,005; that in pursuance of his agreement and promise she paid the whole of said amount, and thereby satisfied said judgment; that afterwards Craig refused to pay her any part of said $1,005, and that his administrator, after due presentation of her claim, also refuses to pay any part thereof. The action is to recover said $1,005. The court below found that such contract had been made by and between said Craig and plaintiff; but found, also, that plaintiff had not paid and satisfied said balance of judgment of $2,010, and thereupon gave judgment for defendant. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment, and from an order denying a new trial. The only question involved is whether or not appellant paid and satisfied said judgment.
At the time of the levy of the execution upon the personal property of said G. C. P. Sears there was also a levy made upon certain real property belonging to him;
It is strenuously argued by appellant that the finding that she did not satisfy said judgment in accordance with her contract with Craig is against the evidence; and also that the court erred in excluding certain evidence offered by appellant on that point.
From certain rulings made at the trial, and from a certain question asked by the court of one of the witnesses, we are disposed to think that the court attached too much conclusiveness to record facts about the sale of the real property, to wit: that appellant bid at such sale a certain sum of money; that she received a certificate of purchase; that the sheriff got a receipt from Wiclcersham’s attorney for the amount of money bid; and that the executions were returned wholly satisfied. These facts seem to have been treated, to some extent, as an estoppel against appellant. For instance, the court finds that “ the moneys derived from said sale were applied by said sheriff in payment of the judgments,” and that “ the said moneys so realized by said sheriff from the sales of said property of said G. C. P. Sears was paid by said sheriff to I. G. Wickersham, the judgment creditor.” But these findings must have been based largely upon the legal view that the return of the sheriff was conclusive; for the evidence shows, beyond question, that as a fact the sheriff never paid any
If the real property to be sold was of little or no value, and the contract between appellant and Craig contemplated her right to bid at the sale, if she chose so to do, with a faint hope of getting something out of the property, it is clear that her purchase at such sale was no breach of her contract with Craig; and it is equally clear that going through the mere forms of having the sheriff return that he received the money as the price bid for the land, paid it over to the judgment creditor, etc., did not estop appellant, as against Craig, from showing the real facts. And the evidence tends strongly to the point that the contract was made in contemplation of appellant’s right to bid at the sale. The contract was made on Saturday, June 28, 1890, and the sale of the real property was to take place on the 30th— the next Monday. Mr. Enos, who witnessed the making of the contract, and whose testimony is uncontradicted, testified as follows: “Mrs. Snyder said to Mr. Craig, ‘ The sale of the real estate is to take place on Monday, and I want to know whether I will pay my father’s share of the judgment of $2,010, or not. I will pay my father's share of that judgment if you will pay your share. I have got a ten thousand dollars and a little over judgment against me that I am responsible for, and I will not bid the real estate off unless you agree to pay your half of the judgment.’ Mr.' Craig told Mrs. Snyder that if she would pay her father’s share of that judgment against him, that he would pay her $1,005, his share of the $2,010; that he expected George Max
Appellant offered to prove that the land bid in by her at said sheriff’s sale was mortgaged to the extent of $6,000, and that there had been a homestead declaration upon it made by G. C. P. Sears before the levy of the executions. The court sustained a general objection to this evidence, and'appellant excepted. We think that this ruling was erroneous and material. The appellant clearly had the right to show the condition and value of the land, as a circumstance in the light of which her said contract with Craig was made, and as tending to show that the contract was as she claimed it to be. It is not to be supposed that Craig would have made such a contract, if the land which he knew would be sold in a day or two under the executions could probably be sold to a bona fide bidder for the amount of both judgments. But if the land was so encumbered as
Judgment and order reversed, and a new trial ordered.
De Haven, J., and Fitzgerald, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- RACHEL J. SNYDER v. FRED L. CLARK, Administrator
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Execution Sale—Sheriff’s Return—Payment of Judgment—Contract of Purchaser With Surety—Estoppel.—The return of a sheriff respecting a sale of the real estate of a principal debtor under two executions, stating that the purchaser had paid the amount of both judgments, and that they were wholly satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale, is not conclusive, and does not estop the purchaser from proving that the sheriff received no purchase money in fact, and that one of the judgments was paid and satisfied in pursuance of a contract with one of the judgment debtors who was cosurety with another judgment debtor, the father of the purchaser, in whose interest the contract was made, providing that the cosurety should reimburse the purchaser for one-half of the judgment if all were paid by the purchaser, and that the contract contemplated the right to bid at the sale. Id.—Action Upon Contract—Evidence—Condition of Land.—In an action upon the contract to recover the money agreed to be contributed in reimbursement of one-half the amount of the judgment paid, evidence is admissible to prove that the land bid in by the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale was mortgaged to the extent of six thousand dollars, and that a homestead had been declared upon it by the principal debtor before the levy of the execution upon it, as tending to show that the bid at the sale in satisfaction of the judgment was contemplated by the contract, and was not a breach of the contract to pay the judgment.