Foster v. Durant

Merrick, J.

As the legal title to the demanded premises never was in Adolphus Durant, it is plain that, without the aid of the St. of 1844, c. 107, the demandant, upon the facts stated in this report, taken in connection with those offered tc be proved, would have acquired no title to the premises. Howe v. Bishop, 3 Met. 26. Nor can that statute afford him assistance, unless its directions were followed, and its requirements complied with, in the levy of the execution.

In the first section of the statute, there is prescribed but one method, one course of proceeding, by means of which a party, who is a grantee of an estate through the acts and doings of a fraudulent debtor, under the circumstances enumerated, can be divested of his title. No difference is mentioned or alluded to, or apparently intended to be authorized, in *541reference to the seizure and levy upon an execution, between real estate and any right or interest in real estate. Either the one or the other, which the debtor may have purchased or paid for, and caused to be fraudulently conveyed to the injury of his creditors, may be seized and appropriated by them to the payment of their debts. But whatever is taken, whether it be the whole real estate, or some special or particular interest in it, is to be taken “ in the same manner as the real estate the legal title to which is in such debtor.” And since there are no words in the statute to limit or qualify the meaning of the phrase “ legal title,” it must be held to express an unincumbered estate in fee. When such an estate is taken in execution, it must be set off to the creditor by a legal appraisement; and he can in no other way acquire a title to it. Rev. Sts. c. 73, §§ 3 seq. And therefore, when a creditor would secure himself by a levy of his execution, either upon real estate or upon some right or interest in it, which his debtor has purchased and paid for and fraudulently caused to be conveyed, for his own benefit and advantage, to another party, there is no course which can be effectually pursued but to follow the direction and comply with the requirements of this particular provision.

This conclusion, that a proper construction of the language of the St. of 1844, c. 107, in relation to the levy of executions in the cases there provided for, limits the remedy, afforded by it, to the setting off to the creditor of the estate taken, whether it be the whole fee or some particular interest only, upon an appraisement by disinterested freeholders duly appointed, and does not allow a sale at auction of any right or interest in real estate which may be seized and taken, is confirmed by a consideration of another of its provisions. In the fourth section, it is enacted that “ all levies made under the preceding provisions shall be void, unless the execution creditor shall commence his action to recover possession of the real estate set off on his execution, within one year from the return of the execution.” The implication from this provision is very strong and significant that the legislature contemplated, and intended to give efficacy to one mode only of levying the execution. The statute mentions and *542provides for setting off the estate by appraisement; that is, it does so substantially and effectually, by referring to that method of levying upon real estate. And since it neither mentions nor alludes to any other mode of proceeding, it would seem that this was intended to be the sole and exclusive remedy afforded.

But there is another and apparently decisive consideration in this, that that course of proceedings is absolutely essential, in order that any effect may be given to the other provision, upon the due conformity to the requirements of which the whole validity of the levy is made to depend. The levy is to be void unless “ the execution creditor ” shall, within one year from its return, commence an action to recover possession of the real estate set off upon it. The prosecution of such a suit is limited to the action of the creditor alone. No stranger, or purchaser of the right of redeeming the estate from a subsisting mortgage, can make the levy permanently effectual by instituting and carrying on an action to recover possession of the estate, or of any interest in it to which he may have, as- he supposes, entitled himself under a sale of it at auction. Yet, if there is to be a public sale, strangers, as well as the execution creditor, may be competitors for the purchase, when the latter alone is competent, by bringing an action, to confirm, or to give efficacy to the title so attempted to be acquired.

It seems therefore to be clear that a levy under this statute must, to be effectual, be by setting off the estate upon and under an appraisement; and that any other mode of proceeding, not being authorized by its provisions, must be wholly inoperative and void. As the demandant had no other title than that supposed to have been acquired by him under the sheriff’s deed, given him in pursuance of the sale at auction of the right of redeeming the estate from an outstanding mortgage, and as that levy was void, this action cannot be maintained.

Judgment for the tenants.