Bledsoe v. Willingham

Bleckley, Justice.

1. First, as to Mrs. Bledsoe. The executions against her were levied upon an estate for her life in the premises; she was in possession, and notice was given to her of the levy. She resists being turned out because, in fact, her interest in the land was not an estate for life in the whole or any part, but an estate in fee simple in one undivided third. If there had been a legal sale in other respects, this answer would not avail her ; for, so far as appears, she took no steps to arrest the sale, and did not give notice to the officer or to bidders that her estate was different from that described in the levy. Must plaintiffs and levying officers know at their peril the full magnitude of the interest which defendants in execution have in land ? We think not, so far as defendants themselves are concerned, especially where due notice is given directly to such defendants of the levy. It may be that where a less estate than that really owned by a defendant is levied upon, the officer, upon being informed of it, might be under obligation to change the levy so as to grasp the larger estate, and if he refused to do it, the sale might be arrested by affidavit of illegality, or by some other means. Possibly, too, a defendant might stand excused from taking any steps whatever to arrest the sale, further than to give notice to the officer and to bidders. But when a defendant has due notice of a levy which is not accurate in the description of his interest, he ought certainly to do something if he does not mean to acquiesce, and not act as if he did acquiesce. The Code, section 3640, declares, it is true, that “the officer making a levy shall always enter the same on the process by virtue of which such levy is made, and in such entry shall plainly describe the property levied *554on, and the amount of the interest of the defendant therein.” But this language does not mean that the interest described shall always, as matter of fact, be the true interest, at the peril of a void sale. It means that the interest intended to be seized and sold, must be defined or specified in the levy, and not set out generally as an interest, or as the interest of the defendant in the property. Doubtless the purpose and expectation of the law are that officers will be diligent, for the sake of both parties to the process, and that the result will commonly be a description corresponding to the fact of the actual interest in the particular case. Of course, the law wants the true interest ascertained and set out; but, as we have stated, where some certain and definite interest is expressed in the levy, and the defendant has notice of it, and yet does nothing and says nothing, the sale will not be void to the extent of the interest specified, though it may turn out that he owned a larger estate. For the reasons which we have endeavored to assign, and for the further reason that the purchaser at sheriff’s sale of a life estate in land, the tenant for life being in possession, is entitled to be put into possession by the sheriff, or to a proper order of court for that purpose, this purchaser, had the sale been otherwise due and legal, would have a right to the order prayed for in this application, as against Mrs. Bledsoe.

2. Next, as to the other ladies, Mrs. Marable and Mrs. McLain. The executions severally against them were levied upon an undivided half in the remainder, one half as the property of the former, and the other half as the property of the latter, the supposed life estate of Mrs. Bledsoe being described as the particular estate upon which this undivided remainder was dependent. Now, it is.a sufficient reason for not turning either of these ladies or their representatives out, that Mrs. Bledsoe is still alive,.and they, or their representatives, do not claim under her, but as tenants in common with her. They cannot be removed by reason of the sale of her supposed life estate, because they do not enjoy the *555possession by her favor but by their own right; and they cannot be turned out by reason of the sale of their supposed remainder interest, because the purchaser of a remainder is not entitled to enter so long as the particular estate is in existence. At sheriff’s sale the purchaser cannot acquire a . larger estate than that levied upon; if the levy is upon a remainder, only a remainder, at most, passes. He cannot be heard to say that there is in fact no particular estate and never was. As to him, it makes no difference, with reference to a present right of possession, that the nominal tenant for life mentioned in the levy is a tenant in common in fee, and not a tenant for life. A remainder is an estate that stands over for future enjoyment, and having bought a remainder, eo nomine, and nothing else, he must wait. We will not here go into the effect of a misdescription of the real interest of Mrs Marable and Mrs. McLain; for, as they were not served with notice of the levy as was Mrs. Bledsoe, the question as to them is not so easy of solution; and any solution of it is rendered unnecessary, now or hereafter, by the concluding head of' this' opinion.

3. The sheriff sold the land under all the fi.fas., as one single act and for a gross sum. The fi. fas. were against^ the three ladies severally, no one of them embracing more than one defendant. And there were two separate plaintiffs, one in certain of the fi.fas., and the other in the rest. The levies were unlike, those affecting Mrs. Bledsoe being upon an estate in the land for her life, and 'those affecting the other two being (each set) upon an undivided half in the remainder. What did the life estate sell for ? What did each undivided half of the remainder sell for ? What credit should be entered on they?, fas. against Mrs. Bledsoe, and what upon those against each of the others ? Is there any possible answer to these questions, outside of mortuary tables and the doctrine of mere chances and probabilities ? For the sheriff to pool similar levies upon the same property of one and the same defendant, may not be uncommon or improper ; but to pool dissimilar levies against different de*556fendants, and sell under all at the same time and for one gross price, is such a proceeding as we have never heard of before. There is no doubt that the sale was illegal and utterly void, and that the purchaser took nothing as against any of the defendants in execution; that he acquired no title, nor any right of possession, present or prospective. It was error to grant any order to aid his entry.

Judgment reversed.