Ex parte Spence
Ex parte Spence
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question is this: Lands were sold by a decree of the chancery court on time, the notes of the purchasers were taken, and an express lien retained in the decrees to secure their payment, and the cause retained in court to collect the purchase money. After-several years, judgments were taken, by motion of the clerk and master, for the balance due on the notes,, and a decree entered to resell the property in pursuance of the lien retained for the payment of the judgments. Thereupon, a petition was filed by certain persons not parties to the original proceedings, and in considering the matter of their petition, it was made
We answer that they cannot, upon most obvious general principles.
The; cause was all the time pending. The purchasers at the chancery sale became so far parties as to require the institution of no new proceedings against them to enforce the lien, and their possession was subordinate to the lien retained, and the argument filed concedes that had they retained possession the lien would not be barred.
We think it is well settled that a purchaser of property, in actual custody and control of a court of chancery pending a litigation in regard thereto, from one of the parties, can acquire no right above that of the party from whom he purchases. It is not even necessary to amend the proceeding so as to make the purchaser a party. The lis pendens is notice to him, and he takes the property subject to the jurisdiction and power of the court to dispose of it, or make such decrees, in regard. to it as it might have
Whether the lien might be lost by the laches of the parties in failure to prosecute said cause, is a •question not made in this cause.
Decree dismissing the petition should be affirmed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- D. H. C. Spence, ex parte
- Status
- Published