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CockRILL, C. J. Both the plaintiffs and defendant have appealed in this cause. Each side was asking ■affirmative relief in the trial court, but if there was the same confusion in the record when the cause was heard as exists in the transcript which is certified here, neither could have complained if the court had refused all relief.
Dates are matters of some importance in the litigation, but, according to the record, almost every event, from the birth of the parties to the entry of the final decree, occurred “ on the — day of ———, 18 — It is not even certain who' are the plaintiffs in the litigation. The action was ¡begun by Nettie Meher, who claimed to be the sole heir at law of E. M. Burk, who died seized and possessed of the land; but, in the final disposition of the case, John and James Burk appear in the record as Nettie Meher’s co-plaintiffs. How they got into the cause, or what interest they have in the land, is not disclosed. The defendant, Cole, admits that the title to the land was in E. M.Burk at the time of his death, but claims that the title-of his heirs, as to a part of it, was divested by sale under a decree of the Craighead circuit court condemning the lands to be sold for the unpaid purchase money due from F. M. Burk, and that the other tract v^as purchased by him at a sale, under an execution, which issued upon the same decree. This decree is exhibited, and is entitled, “ G-. B. Dickinson, as administrator of Michael Dickinson, deceased, plaintiff, v. James N. Burk, as guardian-ad litem minor heirs of F. M. Burk, deceased.” It recites that service was had upon the “ minor heirs of F. M. Burk,” but there is no other designation of the defendants in the decree; no other part of the record in that cause was introduced as evidence in this, and there is nothing to show the identity of the plaintiffs in this action of ejectment with the defendants in the foreclosure suit. We are, perhaps, apprised that Nettie Mehe.r, who is a married woman, is the daughter of F.M.Burk, but whether she was a minor when the decree was rendered and was a party to the suit and represented by J. N. Burk, who is described as the guardian ad litem of minor heirs of F. M. Burk, we cannot tell; nor have we any means of determining whether the other plaintiff's are heirs of F. M. Burk and of the number who were served with process in that case. The court, on the trial, held the decree void as to-these plaintiffs, and refused to give effect to defendant’s deeds. We cannot say upon this state of the record that that was error. But the cause was transferred to-the equity docket, upon the defendant’s prayer to be subrogated to the right of Dickson,s administrator to enforce the payment of the vendor’s lien for the purchase money,’ which he alleged he and his vendors had discharged by the payment of their bids at the commissioner’s and sheriff’s sales; and the court, finding that'the amount of purchase money due for the lands was a lien thereon and that the plaintiff, or those to whose rights he bad succeeded by conv eyance, had discharged the lien, entered a decree for the defendant condemning the land to he sold to repay the purchase money paid by him and his vendors.
1 Subroation Gation: Void judicial and executions sales: Purchaser’s right to restitution. Though there is some conflict in the adjudged cases •on the subject, we entertain no doubt but that one whose bid at a void judicial or execution sale discharges an m- . cumbrance on the land, can have restitution to the extent f the lien discharged before the defendant in the void proceeding, or his heirs, can recover the lands so purchased by him, if his purchase is made in good faith, under the belief that he is acquiring the title. Waggoner v. Lyles, 29 Ark., 47; Brobst. v. Brock, 10 Wallace, 519, 533; Valle’s Heirs v. Fleming, 29 Mo., 152; S. C. 77 Am. Dec., and cases cited in Freeman’s Void Jud. Sales, secs. 51 et seq.2. same: same: But the difficulty in this case is in determining that the bids at the sale made under the decree discharged' a lien, or paid a debt, which could be enforced against the land, or which in any way benefited the heirs of E. M. Burk. If neither of these conditions exists, there is nothing to base an argument for restitution upon. Now, the deed which conveyed the land to E. M. Burk recites the payment in full of the purchase money. This, like any other receipt, is prima facie evidence between the parties of actual payment. "When the decree foreclosing' the supposed lien for the purchase money was declared of no effect, the burden was on the plaintiff in the cross-complaint to establish the existence of the lien. There are some hints in the testimony, and it is broadly stated at the bar, that the plaintiff in the foreclosure suit held the promissory note of E. M. Burk, which recited that it was given for the purchase money of one of the tracts in suit, but the note is not copied in the record, and there is nothing definite to guide us to a conclusion as to its impoi’t. Moreover, F. M. Burk had been dead for more than two or five years when the decree of foreclosure was rendered, and there was administration upon his estate, but there is no evidence that the claim was ever presented to the administrator for allowanced If the debt was not preserved, and the decree of foreclosure is void, there was no subsisting lien to be discharged by the purchasers at the salés made in pursuance of the decree, [Stephens v. Shannon, 43 Ark., 464.] and no room for sub-rogation. See Waggoner v. Lyles, 29 Ark., pp. 55-6. The purchaser at the sale could not occupy any better position than the plaintiff, in the void decree at the time of its rendition. If the plaintiff in that proceeding had no lien when the decree was-rendered the purchaser could acquire none by his purchase.Too much is left to inference for this court to be able to undertake to adjust the rights of the parties with any hope of approximating the equities of the cause. Both sides are at fault. We cannot enter a decree for either. If the proceeding to foreclose the vendor’s lien is void, the title to all the tracts is in the heirs of F. M. Burk, but we connot award the lands to the plain tiffs here, because it does not appear that they comprise all the heirs, or that two of them are heirs at all, or have any interest in the land. Each heir can recover only his proportionate share, and we are unable to determine .what proportion of the lands these plaintiffs are entitled to. George v. Elms, 46 Ark., 266. The decree of foreclosure' is not necessarily a nullity. It is binding upon the heirs who-were actually served with process, [Boyd v. Roane, 49 Ark., 397.] aud the defendant has succeeded to their interest in that part of the land which was sold by the-commissioner under the decree. Admitting the decree of foreclosure to be void, there is not sufficient evidence-before us to sustain the finding that the defendant has-removed an encumbrance from the plaintiffs’ lands.
It is our practice to dispose of equity causes finally and end the litigation here, but this record does not aflord us the opportunity of doing that in this case.
The decree must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Adjudge the costs of the appeals against the two-sides equally.
Document Info
Citation Numbers: 50 Ark. 361
Judges: Cockrill
Filed Date: 11/15/1887
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024