Citation Numbers: 67 Or. 254, 135 P. 879
Judges: Burnett, McBride, Moore, Ramsey
Filed Date: 10/21/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/23/2022
Opinion by
For the purposes of this case many of the contentions in the able brief of counsel for respondent may be admitted. But conceding without deciding that the court had power to correct the decree to conform to the original complaint and mortgage, and that it could do so under the circumstances without notice to the defendant Leonard, there remained other matters which it could not correct nunc pro tunc. The fact remains that the land in dispute was never advertised for sale, and therefore was never in fact sold. Subdivision 2, Section 237, L. O. L., requires that the notice of sale shall “particularly describe” the property to be sold. It is admitted that the notice of sale in this case contained no description of the property in dispute, but described another and different subdivision. It was not in the power of the court by a nunc pro tunc order, or otherwise, to dispense with a proper notice of sale of the property.