Eaton v. White
Eaton v. White
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
Tbe plaintiff in error, who was plaintiff below, claims title to one undivided half of tbe lot through a mortgage executed by George White to Lane and Scott, dated May 23, 1849, and recorded June 18, 1850. Tbe defendant Artemisia White claims title to tbe same premises through a mortgage executed by tbe same mortgagor to Warren Ball, dated February 16, 1850, and recorded February 21, 1850. Both of these mortgages were of a much larger tract of land, of wbicb tbe undivided half lot in dispute was a part. Ball, tbe second mortgagee, testifies that at tbe time of taking and recording bis mortgage, be bad no knowledge of tbe mortgage to Lane and Scott. Under tbe registry law, therefore, bis mortgage, taken without notice of tbe previous mortgage, and being tbe first upon record, became tbe first lien upon tbe prem
The objection that it does not appear .that Stanehfield, who made the sale under the decree upon the Ball mortgage, was either a deputy sheriff, or specially deputed in writing by the sheriff to make the sale, comes too late. We suppose, inasmuch as Stanehfield does not sign his name as deputy, that it must be taken that he acted under special authority given by virtue of the statute now found as sec. 100, ch. 13, R. S. Indeed he says, in his affidavit, that he sold by and under the direction of the sheriff. This implies, we think, that he was specially deputed. If he was not deputed in writing, as required by the statute, the time to make that objection was when the plaintiff moved for a confirmation of the sale. After confirmation, the regularity of his appointment will be presumed, an d courts will not inquire into it collaterally for the purpose of impeaching the sale or the order of the court confirming it.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Eaton v. White and another
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published