Mound City Mutual Life Insurance v. Hamilton
Mound City Mutual Life Insurance v. Hamilton
Opinion of the Court
Under the bill in this cause, filed to foreclose a trust-deed on land to secure a debt due from Hamilton and wife to complainant, a decree was rendered at a former term of this court, ascertaining the complainant’s debt, and directing the land conveyed in the trust-deed to be sold in satisfaction thereof. The master, after advertising the time and place of sale in the Nashville Banner, put up the property at public sale on September 16, 1876, and the same was struck off to the complainant at $150.
The defendant Hamilton now applies, the court being still in session, to set aside this confirmation and open the bid-dings. The application is supported by the affidavit of Hamilton that the property thus bid off at $150, consisting of sixteen acres and sixty-five poles, near Nashville, cost him, with improvements, nearly $2,500, and has rented most of the time for $150 a year, and $100 is offered for the rent of it for next year, and it is listed for taxes at $1,650. The affi-ant states that he carefully examined the columns of the American, the leading newspaper at Nashville, for the purpose of ascertaining when the property would be sold ; that, not finding any advertisement, he concluded that the complainant had determined to hold up the sale of the property until a similar case against affiant and wife, instituted about the same time, and now in the Supreme Court by appeal, should be decided. Affiant also supposed that no sale of the land could be made and confirmed without the knowledge of his counsel. But so it was ; affiant had no notice of the sale until it had been confirmed, and no opportunity of seeing that the property brought something like its value. The application is accompanied by the offer of a responsible party to open the biddings at the price of $500, and this party has executed notes, in conformity with the terms of sale and the practice of the court, for the advanced bid.
I had occasion, shortly after I took my seat on this bench, to consider the question of opening the biddings made at a master’s sale, and came to the conclusion that the biddings might be opened upon the offer of a higher price, if the advance were so considerable as to furnish a sufficient inducement, under all the circumstances. Atkison v. Murfree, 1 Tenn. Ch. 51. To entitle such an offer to
The offer now under consideration is far larger than the percentage mentioned, and is so great — being three and a ■third times more than the original bid — as to demonstrate that the application is not for delay, but in downright earnest. Watson v. Birch, 2 ves. jr. 55. There is, however, this difference in the status of the cases above cited and of this case: in those cases the application was made before actual confirmation of the sale, whereas in this case the application is subsequent to the confirmation, but at the same term. The question to be considered is, Does this fact have any, and what, effect upon the rights of the applicant?
The weight of authority in this state, as in the English and American courts generally, undoubtedly is, that after confirmation it is not of course to open the biddings on the offer of a higher price alone. There must be some circumstances of fraud, mistake, or accident, or some trust relation between the parties, to justify the court in setting aside a contract completed by its own act in confirming the sale. Coffin v. Corruth, 1 Coldw. 194 ; Houston v. Aycock, 5 Sneed, 406 ; Henderson v. Lowry, 5 Yerg. 240 ; Scott v. Nesbit, 3 Bro. C. C. 475 ; Morice v. Bishop of Durham, 11 Ves. 57. The reason is, that by the act of confirmation the contract becomes complete, the purchaser from that date becoming entitled to all the fruits of ownership and subject to all of its risks. Armstrong v. McClure, 4 Heisk. 83. He is in.
Conceding this to be the law, there are, nevertheless, eases in which a contract of sale inter partes will be set ■aside, and no reason occurs why the same grounds would not equally afford relief where the contract has been made through the intervention of a court. And it has been intimated that relief might be granted in the case of a judicial «ale under circumstances which would not justify the setting aside of a private sale. Donaldson v. Young, 7 Humph. 267 ; Owen v. Owen, 5 Humph. 355. One ground upon which relief has been sought, both in» private and judicial «ales, has been inadequacy of consideration. Mere inadequacy of price will not of itself suffice to set aside a contract of sale, though it is strong evidence of fraud or imposition, and when coupled with other, even slight, circumstances, may authorize rescission. White v. Flora, 2 Tenn. 426. If, indeed, the inadequacy be such as, in the language oí Lord Hard wicke, “no man in his senses, and not under delusion, would make, on the one hand, and as no honest and fair man would accept, on the other ” (Farl of Chesterfield v. Janssen, 2 Ves. 155); or such as, in the language of Lord Thurlow, “ it would be impossible to state to a man of common sense without producing an exclamation at the inequality of it” (Gwynne v. Heaton, 1 Bro. C. C. 11); <or such as, in the language of Lord Eldon, “ shocks the conscience ” ( Coles v. Trecothick, 9 Ves. 246) ; — nothing more is required to entitle a party to relief. For, in such cases, fraud becomes a presumption of law. Butler v. Haskell, 4 Desau. 687. And relief may be had even at law. James v. Morgan, 1 Lev. 3. In Herne v. Meers, 1 Vern. 465 (s. c., 2 Bro. C. C. 176, note), a contract of sale was set aside at the instance of the general creditors of the vendor, upon the ground that, “ the premises purchased being worth more than double the money paid,” the bai’gain “ ought in conscience to be made void.” In Heathcote v. Paignon, 2
The same leading principles apply to the opening of bid-dings after confirmation which regulate the action of the-court in the rescission or enforcement of private contracts.. Although Lord Loughborough’s opinion was in favor of the-opening of biddings in such cases upon a mere advance,, where the application was promptly made (Chetham v. Grugeon, 5 Ves. 86), yet the weight of authority is, as. above stated, clearly otherwise. The courts, too, are careful in exercising the jurisdiction upon mere circumstances of neglect. White v. Wilson, 14 Ves. 151. Yet a considerable increase of price is a strong argument, when coupled with other, even slight, circumstances. Watson v. Birch, 4
When we apply these principles to the case before us, it will be seen how strong is the equity to relief. The inadequacy of consideration is as great as in Coffee v. Ruffin, and much greater than in Deaderick v. Watkins, or in the English cases cited and approved in Wright v. Wilson. The negligence of the applicant was not greater than the negligence of the complainant, in the last-named case. Both were guilty of negligence ; for the one, whose business, called him from the state when his trust-deed was executed,, should have appointed an agent to attend to his interests ;
I am of opinion that, upon the strictest view of the purchaser’s rights after confirmation, the relief asked for ■should be granted.
But the strictest view of the rights of a purchaser after confirmation arises only when the application is made at a berm of the court subsequent to that during which the sale was confirmed. Such were all of our cases cited above. 1 Coldw. 194 ; 5 Sneed, 406 ; 5 Yerg. 240 ; 2 Sneed, 125. ‘The new proceedings, in such cases, are in substance, whatever may be the form, an original suit for the rescission •of the contract made by the confirmation, and executed by the decree. Moore v. Watson, 4 Coldw. 68; Horn v. Denton, 2 Sneed, 125 ; Brown v. Frost, 10 Paige, 245 ; Campbell v. Gardner, 3 Stockt. 427 ; McMinn v. Phipps, 3 Sneed, 196. Does the same strict view of the rights of the purchaser prevail when the application is made at the •same term at which the sale was confirmed ? It is well settled in this state — so well settled that, in the language of ■one of our most eminent judges, “it would be a waste of time to expatiate on the question” — that, during the term, the judgments and decrees of the court are in the breast of the judge, and may be changed, modified, or overruled by him. Per Turley, J., in Timmons v. Garrison, 4 Humph. 150. And see, to the same effect, Abbot v. Fagg, 1 Heisk. 749, and Theavenought v. Hardeman, 4 Yerg. 565. The
Under the usual practice in this state, the ends of justice-require that the courts should consider applications to advance the biddings, made at any reasonable time during the term, as made before confirmation. Under the practice of' this court, the applicant should be required to give a sufficient excuse for the delay in applying until after confirmation, and will, ordinarily, be put under the terms of paying-the costs of the decree of confirmation, and of the subsequent proceedings to effectuate the sale.
In this instance, the amount of advance is so great as to-demonstrate the good faith of the applicant and the truthfulness of his excuse, and the sale will be set aside, and the-biddings opened for ten days, as if the application had been before confirmation.
I have cited Houston v. Aycock, 5 Sneed, 406, for the principle that it is not of course to open biddings after confirmation. The decision itself, upon the facts disclosed,, is one of the few decisions in our books which “ shock the
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.