The Opinion of the Court was delivered by
Stewart, on the 19th of July, 1847, filed his bill in Chancery against Jesse T. Dutcher and R. V. M. Croes,settingforththat Dutcher, at the April term, 1845, of the Circuit Court of Kane county, recovered a judgment against him for twenty one dollars and ninety three cents debt, and costs of suit amounting to five dollars and fifty six cents ; that execution issued upon said judgment, and was levied by the Sheriff of Kane county upon a tract of land belonging to complainant, and containing fifty seven acres and seventeen hundredths of an acre, described by metes and bounds ; that said land was sold en masse, December 13, 1845, to Croes, who was the attorney for Dutcher, for thirty three dollars and fifty cents; that it lay within a short distance of the village of St. Charles, was susceptible of division, well improved, and of the value of at least $1,000 at the time of filing the bill; that the Sheriff had been guilty of various irregularities in the sale of the land, such as a failure to return the execution or to file a certificate of sale with the recorder; that no notice was given of the sale on the day it took place; that complainant resided in McHenry county at the time the judgment was obtained against him, and until some time after the sale of the land; that in June, 1845, he sent the money by one Thomas Stewart to pay the full amount of the judgment and costs, and supposed they were paid till long afterwards; that he had no knowledge of the sale to Croes till after the time for redeeming from the sale had expired, and that he had offered to pay him the amount of his bid and interest, and ten dollars besides, if he would release his claim upon the land; but Croes refused to surrender his claim, and threatened to eject complainant from the land. The prayer of the bill is to have the sale set asid.e
The defendant, Croes, who alone was served with process, demurred to the bill for want of equity, and the Circuit Court sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the bill, which is the error complained of.
The demurrer admits the allegations of the bill, one of which is that no notice was given of the sale of said land to take place on the day it was sold. The attorney of the plaintiff in execution being the purchaser, he is chargeable with notice of the Sheriff’s proceedings, and, consequently, does not come within that provision of the statute, (Rev. Stat. 302, § 11,) which makes valid all sales, notwithstanding any irregularity of the Sheriff in cases where the purchaser has no notice of such irregularity. Day v. Graham, 1 Gilm. 441.
It being admitted that the sale was made without notice, and to a purchaser in contemplation of law, cognizant of the fact, the complainant had a right to have it set aside, and the demurrer should have been overruled.
The other irregularities complained of, although violations of duty on the part of the Sheriff, are not such as to affect the validity of the sale. Had there been an allegation that the land was worth $1,000 at the time of sale instead of at the time of filing the bill, such allegation in< connection with the other statements in the bill would have presented a clear case for the intervention of a Court of Equity, for it would never be allowable for an officer to sell, era masse, a tract of land worth $1,000 to satisfy an execution for less than thirty dollars, when the tract was susceptible of division, and the sale of a small part would have satisfied the debt.
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this Opinion.
Decree reversed.