The action is brought for the purpose of setting aside and cancelling of record certain deeds of conveyance under which the defendants, Fitch, Moseley and others who derive title from them, claim the lands in question, as a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title. The complaint also prays that the plaintiff may be let into possession. The plaintiff assumes that these conveyances are entirely void, and that none of the denfendants ever acquired any title whatever to the premises, at least as against the creditors of Peter Arndt. The referee finds, as matter of fact, that the defendants, Fitch and Moseley, are bona fide purchasers, without notice of any fraud or defect in the title, after searching the records which showed a complete and perfect title in their grantors. That they paid a valuable consideration is not disputed. It is clear enough, that at the time the defendants, Fitch and Moseley, purchased and took their convej'ance the title was apparently in their grantor, Emily F. Dexter. The records of the county *254showed that her title was complete and perfect. It went back to the sheriff’s sale, and unless the power of the sheriff had been extinguished before he made his conveyance, it is entirely clear that the case has been properly decided.
It is conceded that the judgment was a lien on the premises, and that the sale by the sheriff upon the execution was regular; and that his certificate of the sale in the hands of the plaintiff in that judgment, who was the purchaser, was a regular and valid instrument. This entitled the purchaser, or his assignee of the certificate, to a conveyance from the sheriff in case the amount of the bid was not paid by the judgment debtor within one year, with the prescribed interest, and ho creditor of his redeemed within three months thereafter. If a sheriff refuses under such circumstances to convey, the court will compel him .to do so. But a payment of the amount of the bid with the prescribed interest, within the year by the judgment debtor, puts an end to the sale, and extinguishes entirely the power of the sheriff to convey. If he executes and delivers a deed after such payment, it conveys no title, but the title remains in the debtor as it was before the sale. (Stafford v. Williams, 12 Barb. 240, and cases there cited.) By such payment the certificate becomes “null and void.” (2 R. S. 371.) It is quite manifest, however, that it is optional with the judgment debtor, whether he will redeem or allow the sale to stand, and the certificate thereof to remain in force. He is under no legal obligation to any one to redeem. Hor can he be compelled to do so for the benefit of a subsequent creditor or third person. If, instead of paying, and thus rendering the certificate of sale null and void, and extinguishing the power of the sheriff to convey, the judgment debtor having still the title, chooses to advance the money to a third person to enable the latter to purchase the certificate and thus keep it in force, I do not perceive any legal objection to the transaction. If no fraud is practiced I do not see how it can be regarded as hostile to the rights of subsequent creditors. Their rights certainly *255are in no respect affected or prejudiced by the transfer of the sheriff's certificate of sale from the purchaser to another. They remain the same, precisely, as though the original purchaser still held the certificate. Indeed, it is quite difficult to see how fraud, in -fact, as against subsequent creditors, can be predicated upon such a transaction, where there is no concealment, and nothing done to cover the true state of affairs, or to mislead such creditors. But there is no question of actual intentional fraud in this case. The plaintiff does not pretend that either herself or those under whom she claims, were in any respect deceived or misled by reason of the .assignment of the certificate. Nothing prevented them, or either of them, from exercising their right of redemption from the assignee and holder of the certificate, but sheer carelessness and inattention to their rights. The defendants, Bitch and Moseley, did not purchase until four years after the sheriff's sale, and as nothing in all that time had been done to preserve the lien of the mortgage, they might well take it for granted that such lien no longer existed or could be claimed to exist. But, as before remarked, no question of actual fraud in procuring the transfer of the certificate by the judgment debtor is raised or jjassed upon by the referee. The plaintiff’s .case rests upon the naked ground that the advance of the money, for the purpose of having the certificate assigned and thus kept on foot, by the judgment debtor, operated of necessity, and as matter of law, as a redemption by him, and rendered the sheriff’s certificate null and void, and took away all power from the sheriff to execute a con-, veyance valid for any purpose against creditors. But this position can not, I think, be successfully maintained. Money paid by a judgment debtor to a purchaser for the purpose of redeeming is one thing, but money advanced to a third person for the purpose of having the certificate assigned to such third person is not the same, but quite another and different thing, or transaction. In the latter case the power of the sheriff is not extinguished or affected in any degree, but is *256expressly reserved and continued by the voluntary election and choice of the only person who has within the year any right to act in the premises. It can make no difference in a legal point of view that the money is thus advanced by the judgment debtor to an attorney of a third person without the knowledge or assent of such third person at the time. If such third person afterwards ratify what has been done in his name, hy accepting the title from the sheriff, and after-wards conveying it, it is in law equivalent to an antecedent authority to the person so acting in his name and behalf. It is too clear for argument that the grantee of the sheriff under such circumstances, would as between himself and the judgment debtor, acquire and have a perfect ancl absolute title to the land thus conveyed. It was perfectly immaterial who advanced the money to procure the assignment of the certificate of sale from the purchaser to Jacob W. Arndt, as respects the authority of the sheriff to convey the title of Peter Arndt, the judgment debtor. As the judgment debtor elected not to have the money paid by way of redemption, but advanced by way of a purchase of the right acquired by the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale, in favor of a third person, the sheriff was bound to convey to the assignee of the certificate, and had no right to inquire who furnished the money by which the assignment was procured.
The conveyance may perhaps, in such a case, be voidable by the subsequent creditors of the judgment debtor, but it is not absolutely void and of no effect, even as against them. It is perfectly good, and the title under it remains vested in the grantee until it is set aside, or the grantee is compelled to convey by the judgment of some competent court. If voidable at all in a case like this, it must be upon the ground that it is, in substance and effect, a mere voluntary conveyance, which an existing creditor may avoid to the extent of his own claim. It is unnecessary in this case to decide whether a creditor, having a lien upon premises thus sold, who has slept upon his right to redeem, and suffered the time to pass by, *257can, after the lapse of years, go hack and attack the title conveyed by the sheriff to the assignee of the certificate, on the ground that it was in the nature of a voluntary conveyance and thus fraudulent in law as against his debt. Because, conceding his right to do so, as against the immediate grantee of the sheriff, it would by no means follow that he could maintain an action against a bona fide purchaser from such grantee to set aside his conveyance. In that view just the case would be presented, where, according to all the authorities, a bona fide purchaser would be protected in his title against a creditor of the former owner. The authorities upon this question are all one way, and it would be superfluous to cite them. The statute alone is conclusive upon this subject. (2 R. S 137, § 5.)
[Monroe General Term, September 5, 1865.The defendants, Fitch and Moseley, purchased and took a conveyance of the entire premises, paying a valuable consideration therefor, and the fact is distinctly found by the referee that they had no notice of any defect in the title, having made due search. The referee, therefore, very properly held and decided that the lien of the mortgage, under which the plaintiff purchased, was cut off by the sheriff’s deed, and that the action could not be maintained against the defendants, Fitch and Moseley, and the other defendants who claimed portions of the premises under them. The testimony before the referee upon the main question was quite conflicting, and we can not disturb his finding. In other respects the findings of fact by the referee appear to be fully warranted by the evidence. There was no dispute in relation to the possession of the premises having been held under the sheriff’s deed at all times after it was given.
The judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Johnson, Darwin Smith and James C. Smith, Justices.]