Judges: Peters
Filed Date: 4/8/1876
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
Opinion by
The land mortgaged was certainly the property of Mrs. Douglass, she having the legal or general estate therein, and the debt secured thereby appears to have been the debt of her husband. Nevertheless a mortgage of her land executed jointly by herself and husband was valid under the statute, as held by this court in Smith, et al., v. Wilson, 2 Met. 235, and approved by their court in Johnston v. Ferguson, Ib. 503, and in the still later case of Sharp’s Adm’r v. Proctor’s Adm’r & Heirs, 5 Bush 396. The efficiency of the mortgage of the wife’s land as a security for the debt is, therefore, an adjudged question.
The description given of the land in the petition sought to be sold is two undivided sixths of a tract of land containing one hundred acres lying in Boyle county, state of Kentucky, one mile west of the
To the suit to foreclose the mortgage no defense was made. On the 3rd of September, 1873, the cause was finally heard, and a personal judgment was rendered against H. C. Douglass for the debt, interest and costs, and it was further adjudged that the equity of redemption of defendants, H. C. Douglass and S. E. Douglass, or either of them, in the mortgaged property mentioned and described in the proceedings and the deed of mortgage on file, given by them to the plaintiff to secure the payment for which judgment is above rendered, should be thereby foreclosed. It is adjudged that so much of said property as will pay to the plaintiff said sum with interest at said rate from said date until the day of sale and costs of this action. and expenses of sale, including $25 allowed commissioner for making sale, and to be taxed as costs, be sold, etc.; and then directions are given when, where and how the sale shall be advertised and made.
On the 22nd of December, 1873, the master returned his report of sale to the court, in which he reports “he exposed to public sale the property in” the judgment mentioned on Monday, the 20th of October, 1873, tHa.t being county court day, before the court house door in Danville, Ky., after having first duly advertised the same. He then describes the manner he admitted the sale, and concludes by saying he first offered less than the entire property but not receiving sufficient bids therefor to satisfy the judgment, he sold the entire property directed to be sold, and Samuel Stone being the highest and best bidder became the purchaser thereof at the price of $769.68.
The description of the land as given in the judgment is wholly insufficient to enable the master to identify the land he was directed to sell; nor could he by any paper in the suit find the tract out of which he was to sell two-sixths. He might, front the report of the commissioners who allotted to Mrs. Harby dower in her late husband’s real estate, find “lots 7 and 8;” but when he went on the land he would not be enabled from that alone to find the dower land; and from what end or side of said two lots the two-sixths thereof was to be set apart to Mrs. Douglass is still more uncertain; the judgment is too uncertain and indefinite, and cannot, for that reason, be sus
Moreover the allowance to the commissioner is more than the statute allows him for making the sale.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.