delivered thé opinion of the Court.
This was an action in the nature of a bill in equity, commenced in 1864 in the Circuit Court of Franklin County and taken by a change of venue on the application of defendants to the Gasconade Circuit Court.
The petition, in substance, alleges that the plaintiffs are owners in fee of certain lands in Franklin County which are described in the petition.
The petition sets forth the title under which plaintiffs claim, by which it appears that these lands originally belonged to various parties trading under the firm name of the “ Missouri Mining and Smelting Association ” — that one Brown obtained a judgment against said parties in the Franklin County Circuit Court, under which he caused the land to be regularly sold at execution sale, and bought them and took a Sheriff’s deed for them and entered into possession thereof, and by mesne conveyances from him the plaintiffs claim title, and claim that they and those under whom they claim have *341been in continuous possession ever since the execution sale and deed, which was made in 1846.
The petition further alleges that Augustus H. Evans, deceased, the ancestor oí the defendants, and another party had obtained judgments in the Circuit Court of the United States at St. Louis, which had been paid off but were fraudulently kept on foot without full satisfaction being entered. And that the said Augustus H. Evans fraudulently caused executions to be issued on said satisfied judgments and had them levied on the same lands, and that under these satisfied judgments and executions the then Marshal (Birch) sold the lands during the session of the County Court of Eranklin County, and when the Circuit Court was not sitting.
That this sale was made before the sale under which plaintiffs claim ; that at the time the said Brown purchased he had no knowledge or information that such sale had taken place5 and the plaintiffs purchased without any notice thereof; that subsequently to the purchase made by Brown, Marshal Birch having been removed from office his successor Robert C. Ewing under the order of the United States Circuit Court executed a Marshal’s deed to Augustus H. Evans for said lands so bought by him under said executions.
The plaintiffs set up, not only that this Marshal’s deed was fraudulently obtained as aforesaid, but that the Marshal’s sale and deed are void, because such sale was not made at a session of the Circuit Court but at a session of the County Court.
The petition asks that this Marshal’s deed be set aside as a nullity, and that the title be divested out of the defendants, who are heirs at laws of Augustus Evans, deceased, and invested in plaintiffs.
The answer denies the material allegations of the petition in regard to plaintiffs being owners of the land, and denies all fraud on the part of their ancestor, and the answer charges that the Marshal’s sale and deed to their ancestor, was valid ; that under the rules of the United States Courts, these lands were properly sold at a session of a County Court; that under his purchase their ancestor took possession, and that' he and *342they have been in continuous possession, and they set up this possession as a bar under the statute'of limitations. The answer then asks for affirmative relief by way of counter-claim or cross-bill, and prays that the deeds and title set up by the plaintiffs may be set aside as clouds upon their title.
On the trial, the plaintiffs gave evidence tending to show that the judgment under which the ancestor of the defendants bought these lands had been paid off, and evidence conducing to show that after the purchase by Brown, the ancestor Evans congratulated him on his success, and set up no claim to these lands. There was also evidence given conducing to show that Brown took possession under his purchase, by renting out a field of some fifteen or more acres, and that this possession was continued, and kept up by the parties claiming under him.
The evidence does not show any continuous possession by the defendants or their ancestor. There was no evidence given, that the plaintiffs or those under whom they claim, had any notice of the Marshal’s sale to Evans.
The defendants introduced evidence tending to show that the United States judgments were not satisfied, but that at least the costs remained unpaid when Evans purchased.
The Circuit Court found for the plaintiffs, and made a decree as prayed for in the petition, and the defendants excepted to its rulings, and have brought the case here by writ of error.
The first question raised by this record is the validity of the .Marshal’s sale and deed to Augustus H. Evans, the ancestor of the defendants.
Under the act of Congress of 1792, the United States Courts had the power to make such rules as they might deem proper in regard to final process and the proceedings of the Marshal thereon. This act remained in force until the 19th of May, 1828, when Congress passed “an act further to regulate processes in the courts of the United States.” (4 Statute at Large, 288). By the third section of this act, it is provided that writs of execution and other final process issued on judgments and decrees'rendered in any courts of the United States, and the pro-. *343ceedings thereupon, shall be the same, except their style, in each state asare now, (1828) used in the courts of such States, saving to the courts of the Uuited States, instates in which there are not courts of equity with the ordinary equity jurisdiction, the power of prescribing the modes of executing their decrees inequity, by rules of courts. Provided, however, that it should be in the power of the courts if they saw fit in their discretion, by rules of courts, so far to alter final process in said courts as to conform the same to any change which might be adopted by the legislatures of the respective states for the State Courts.
The transcript in this case shows that the Marshal’s; sales in this ease were made under judgments at law and not decrees in equity.
It will be seen that since the passage of the act of 1828, the United States courts have no right to make any regulations for the government of their Marshals, in conducting sales under executions at law, different-from those required by the State laws.
They may conform them to such alterations as may from time to time be made by state laws.
This has been the construction of the act of Congress of 1828 by the Supreme Court of the United States ever since its passage. The question has arisen in numerous cases, and has uniformly been decided the same way by that court. (See Beers vs. Hanghton, 9 Pet., 361; Beers vs. Duval, 13 Pet., 45; United States vs. Knight, 14 Pet., 301; Duncan vs. Darst, 1 How., 301; McCracken vs. Hayward, 2 How., 610; Rriggs vs. Johnson County, 6 Wall., 190; Smith vs. Cockrill, 6 Wall., 756.)
Those cases decided by that court maintaining a different doctrine, arose under the act of 1792, and are not in conflict with the authorities above cited.
There never has been any law of this State, authorizing execution sales of real estate to be made in vacation of the Circuit Court and during the session of a County Court. Our laws have always required such sales to be made at the court house, during the session of the Circuit Court, except under acts ere*344afciug Common Pleas Courts, they are allowed to be made during the sessions of the Common Pleas by the express or implied provisions of such acts.
The place and time of sale, as thus fixed by the laws of this Sta-te, must be observed in execution sales as a regulation of supreme importance. (Jackson vs. Magruder, ante p. 55.)
It is well known by the citizens, that sales of that character cannot take place at a County Court, and therefore a notice to that effect would be disregarded, and result in a ruinous sacrifice of property. In my judgment, it is essential to the validity of such sales that they should be made during the sessiou of the proper court, and a violation of this rule would render the sale void, not only in a direct but also in a collateral proceeding.
In Smith vs. Cockrill, 6 Wall., 756, it was held by the Supreme Court of the United States in an action of ejectment, that a Marshal’s sale and deed were void, when there was no appraisement of the real estate as required by the laws of Kansas.
If a Marshal can violate the law by selling at a County Court, why not suffer him to do so when no court at all is in session, or at a place where no courts are held? It seems to me that there can be no doubt about the invalidity of the Marshal’s deed under consideration.
Tet the facts of this invalidity would not be manifest to persons unskilled in the law, nor even to the most skillful without close investigation of the several acts of Congress, and the authority of the courts to regulate such sales. And therefore the existence of such a deed would throw a cloud over the title of the real owner and render the land less salable.
It is urged with great vehemence by the learned counsel for defendants, that the order of the United States Circuit Court directing the successor, the Marshal who made the sale to execute a deed to the purchaser, was a judicial act of the court, and as such cured all prior defects.
This position, to-my mind, is untenable. That order was made several years after the sale, and subsequently to the purchase made by Brown. It was made in the absence of all *345parties, there being no presumption that they remained in court for any purpose. It was therefore, a mere ex parte proceeding, not in the nature of a judicial act, for there was nothing to adjudicate. This act of the court was simply administrative, the exparte petition was presented, and the order followed as a matter of course. By this order the then existing Marshal was empowered to do only what his predecessor could have done without such order, if he had remained in office, and the deed made by him can have no more effect than the deed made by the previous Marshal.
A Sheriffs or Marshal’s deed relates to the time of sale. But this rule is not allowed to operate so as to cut out the intervening rights of strangers without notice. It only relates as to the parties and their privies and purchasers without notice.
Anri therefore in this case if the Marshal’s Deed was valid, it did not relate to the sale so as to affect the rights of the plaintiffs.
After the final trial and decree the question was raised by motion in arrest, that there was no equity in plaintiff’s petition and the point is made here that their remedy if any, is complete at law.
I have already intimated that such a title as plaintiffs claim under, is sufficient to cast a cloud over the defendant’s title and is such as would render their land unsalable in the market. I know that the authorities are somewhat conflicting in regard to what sort of titles constitute a cloud, so as to warrant a Court of equity to interfere and remove it. Some of the Courts hold, that if the defect is apparent on the deed, the law will not entertain jurisdiction; but I think that the weight of authority and reason sustain the position, that if the defect is such as to require legal acumen to discover it, whether it appears on the deed or proceedings, or is to be proven aliunde, Courts of equity entertain jurisdiction to remove the cloud. Wells vs. Weston (22 Mo., 384) was a bill in chancery to enjoin a sale and deed for taxes, which had been levied by the town of Weston under a legislative act, authorizing it to tax all veal estate outside the town limits to the extent of half a mile. *346The bill was demurred to and the demurrer sustained. The only point relied on in the bill was that the Act of the Legislature was unconstitutional, and although the sale and deed would for that reason be void, it was urged in the complaint that such sale and deed would cast a eloud on the complainant’s title. Judge Leonard delivered an able opinion holding that the law was unconstitutional, but reversed the judgment of the Circuit Court. In Lockwood vs. City of St. Louis, (24 Mo., 20,) the same point was made and decided the same way. That was an injunction to restrain the collection of taxes on real estate because of their illegality, and this Court sustained the jurisdiction on the ground that a cloud would be cast on the plain tiff’s-title.
The remarks of Judge Napton in Gamble vs. St. Louis, (12 Mo., 617,) are rather too broad and'in conflict-with the weight of authority, if he intended to be understood as holding in all cases where the defect appears on the face of the pro. ceedings, a Court of equity will not interfere but leave (the parties to their remedy at law.
In the case at .the bar, the defendants are so well satisfied with their Marshal’s Deed, that they set it up in their answer as valid, and ask for affirmative relief against the title relied on by plaintiffs, and pray the Court to set'aside the plaintiffs deeds as clouds on their title.
It seems to me that such a title so relied on by defendants, is a sufficient cloud to give a Court of equity jurisdiction to remove it.
An objection is made to the form of the decree. There appear to be more lands embraced in defendant’s deed than are covered by plaintiff’s petition and deeds, and the decree not -only sets aside the deed, but adjudges the whole of these lands 'to the plaintiffs. This was no doubt a clerical mistake, and the decree will be so modified here as to embrace only the lands claimed by plaintiffs in the petition, and that the defendants and those holding under them be forever enjoined from setting up said deeds against the- plaintiffs and those holding under them. Although this form of judgment is not asked *347for in the petition, the fact, alleged therein and proved will-warrant it.
There is nothing in the objection that the plaintiff, Emma T. Player, does not show a regular chain of paper title. Adverse possession for ten years is not only a bar as a limitation but constitute an affirmative legal title.
"Upon the whole case, with the above modification in the judgment, it will be affirmed.
The other Judges concur.