Cole v. Miller
Cole v. Miller
Opinion of the Court
In' this action, the appellant, as plaintiff, sued the appellees, ás defendants, in the court below.
In his amended complaint, the appellant alleged, in substance, that, on the 6th day of October, 1874, he recovered a judgment, in’ the court below, against one John R. gtevens and Sophia', his "wife, for the surd of six hundred and twenty-three dollars and thirty-two cents and the costs of suit, with ten per cent, interest, to be executed without relief from valuation or appraisement laws, and for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage, executed'by the said John R. and Sophia Stevens to the appellant on the 10th day of June, 1873, on four parcels of real estate, each particularly described, in Harrison county, Indiana,, containing in the aggregate one hundred and twenty-six acres, and the sale of said mortgaged property, to-satisfy said judgment, interest and costs, all of which would more fully appear by reference to the records and
To the appellant’s amended complaint, the appellees jointly and severally demurred, upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against them, or either of them, which demurrers were sustained, and to these decisions the appellant excepted.
The appellant declined to amend, and thereupon judgment was rendered on the demurrers, by the court below.
The appellant has assigned as eri’ors in this court the decisions of the court below in sustaining the joint and several demurrers of the appellees to his amended complaint.
It seems very clear to us, that the appellant’s complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the appellees, or either of them.
Conceding each and every allegation of fact in the appellant’s complaint to be true, as therein stated, conceding that the appellant, as alleged, was deceived and misled by the false and fraudulent representations of John R. Stevens, a stranger to the record of this cause, and that (those representations were made in the presence and hearing of, and were assented to by, the appellee Isaiah
However erroneous, or even illegal, the proceedings of the auditor of Harrison county or of the appellee Isaiah Stevens may have been in the premises, the appellant could not maintain an action thereon, unless he could show that in some way or other he was thereby injured. That is just what the appellant failed to do, in his complaint in this ■action. On the contrary, as we read the averments of his complaint, he showed therein very conclusively, that he was not in any manner, or to any extent, endamaged by the alleged false and fraudulent representations of said ■John E. Stevens. It was alleged by the appellant, in his » complaint, that he intended to bid, at the auditor’s sale -of the land mortgaged to the school-fund, the sum •of one hundred and ninety-six dollars; and again, that he had instructed his attorney, Judge Tracewell, to bid for him at said sale, the said sum of one hundred and ninety-six dollars; but it was not alleged, that the appellant had intended to bid, or had instructed his attorney to hid for him, at said auditor’s sale of said land, any greater sum than the said sum of one hundred and ninety-six dollars.
Of course, at such auditor’s sale, under the law, the land mortgaged was to be sold, at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash; and when it was alleged in the complaint, that the land in question had been sold, at the auditor’s sale thereof, for the sum of three hundred ■and seventy dollars, or for the sum of one hundred and seventy-four dollars more than the appellant had intended to bid, or had instructed his attorney to bid for him, then it becomes difficult, if not impossible, to see wherein or how the appellant could be damnified by the alleged false and fraudulent representations of said John E. ■Stevens. Certainly, under the averments of this com
It is claimed, however, in argument, that the auditor’s sale of said mortgaged land was irregular and void, in. this, that the appellee Isaiah Stevens had failed, refused and neglected to pay the amount of his said bid therefor,, at the said sale thereof, to wit, the said sum of three hundred and seventy dollars.
It is provided in section 96 of “ An act to provide for a general system of common schools,” etc., approved March 6th, 1865, that, at the sale of lands mortgaged to, the school fund, “ the auditor shall sell so much of the mortgaged premises, to the highest bidder, for cash, as will pay the amount due for principal, interest, damages and costs.” 1 R. S. 1816, p. 801.
The allegations in the appellant’s complaint, in regard to the alleged non-payment, by the appellee Isaiah Stevens, of the amount of his bid at the auditor’s sale, are not such, in our opinion, as fairly present the question discussed by his counsel. It was alleged by the appellant,, that the appellee had failed, refused and neglected to pay the amount of his said bid, at said auditor’s sale, to wit, the sum of three hundred and seventy dollars, to the said-auditor; but that might well have been strictly and literally true, and yet the amount of said bid might have been promptly and legally paid in cash to the proper officer. Eor, under section 92 of the act before referred to, as we construe it, the amount of said bid was properly and legally payable, not to the auditor, but to the treasurer, of said Harrison county, and only the treasurer’s receipt therefor was required to be filed with the county auditor. 1 R. S. 1876, p. 800.
In conclusion, we may properly remark, that there was not the slightest pretence in the complaint, that •either the present auditor of Harrison county or his predecessor in office, who was the acting party in making said sale, was in any manner or to any extent a party in or to the said alleged false and fraudulent representations.
In our opinion, no error was committed by the court below, in sustaining the appellees’ demurrers to the appellant’s amended complaint. •
The judgment is affirmed, at the appellant’s costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.