In a sale under the Confiscation Act, of July 17, 1862, 12 Stat.
589, the purchaser is presumed to know that if the offender had no
estate in the premises at the time of seizure, nothing passed to
the United States by decree or to him by purchase, and general
language of description in his deed will not operate as a warranty
or affect this presumption, and this rule prevails as to the United
States, although a different rule may prevail in the state where
the property is situated as to judicial sales under state laws.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
In March, 1865, the plaintiff purchased for the sum of
$7,400
Page 110 U. S. 631
certain real property in New Orleans at a sale upon a decree
rendered by the district court of the United States, in proceedings
for its confiscation, under the Act of July 17, 1862, and
subsequently obtained a deed of the property from the marshal. The
proceedings were instituted in the usual form by a libel of
information filed on the 7th of August, 1862, by the district
attorney of the Eastern District of Louisiana, on behalf of the
United States, against ten lots of ground alleged to be the
property of Charles M. Conrad. The libel sets forth that the
marshal of the district, under authority from the district
attorney, given pursuant to instructions of the Attorney General,
had seized the lots of ground, which are fully described, as
forfeited to the United States; that they were owned by Conrad
then, and on the 17th of July, 1862, and previously; that after
that date he had acted as an officer of the army or navy of the
rebels in arms against the government of the United States, or as a
member of Congress, or as a judge of a court, or as a cabinet
officer, or as a foreign minister, or as a commissioner, or as a
consul of the so-called Confederate States. Indeed, many other
official positions he is charged in the alternative with holding,
the district attorney evidently regarding him as a person of so
much consequence that he must have been called to some official
position by the Confederate government, in which he gave aid and
comfort to the enemies of the United States, and therefore his
right, title, and estate in the property was forfeited, and ought
to be condemned. Publication of monition followed, and no one
appearing to answer, judgment by default was entered, declaring
that the lots of land, the property of Conrad, were condemned as
forfeited to the United States, and a decree for their sale was
entered. In the writ issued to the marshal, and in his deed of
sale, the lots are described as the property of Conrad. Under the
act of Congress, no other interest than that of Conrad was
forfeited, and no other interest was sold. It was for his alleged
offenses that the libel was filed, and the forfeiture sought. It
was undoubtedly in the power of Congress to provide for the
confiscation of the entire property as being within the enemy's
country, without restricting it to the estate of the defendant, but
Congress
Page 110 U. S. 632
did not see fit to so enact, and as we said in speaking of the
proceedings in this case:
"The court cannot enlarge the operations of the stringent
provisions of the statute. The plaintiff had notice of the
character and legal effect of the decree of condemnation when he
purchased, and is therefore presumed to have known that if the
alleged offender possessed no estate in the premises at the time of
their seizure, nothing passed to the United States by the decree,
or to him by his purchase."
Burbank v. Conrad, 96 U. S. 291.
This would be true with reference to any layman who might have
been the purchaser, but with special force may it be applied to the
plaintiff, who, as the district attorney, directed the seizure, and
conducted the proceedings to the decree.
It turned out in other litigation that at the time of the
seizure Conrad possessed no estate in the premises. He had
transferred the property by a public act of sale before a notary on
the 31st of May, 1862, before the confiscation statute was passed,
which applied only to the property of persons thereafter guilty of
acts of disloyalty and treason. In express terms, it withheld from
its application the property of persons who before its passage may
have offended in those respects. Conrad's power of disposition when
he made his sale to his sons was not impaired by anything he may
previously have done. This was expressly adjudged by this Court in
the case of Conrad, the son, against the plaintiff. 96 U.S.
96 U. S. 279.
But because of the general language used in the description of
the property in the libel of information and in the deed of the
marshal, it is contended that something more than the estate of the
offender, Conrad, was warranted by the United States to the
purchaser, and the warranty having failed, that he is entitled to a
return of the purchase money; but this position is without even
plausible foundation. As already stated, the plaintiff was presumed
to know the law on the subject, and that by his purchase under the
decree he could only acquire such an estate as the alleged offender
possessed to hold during the offender's life, and that if the
offender had no estate, none was forfeited to the United States or
sold under the decree of the court. So no false assurance could
have been made to the purchaser which
Page 110 U. S. 633
could be suggested as a possible ground for the return of the
money; nor could there have been any mistake of fact which would be
recognized as a ground for relief even in equity, for the fact
suggested as having been misunderstood was declared by the law.
Besides, the title to property sold under judicial process is
not warranted by the party obtaining the judgment of the court.
Whatever title the law gives, the purchaser takes, no more and no
less, and he must govern himself accordingly. Any different rule
prevailing on this subject in Louisiana or any other state by
statute cannot change the position of the United States with
respect to judicial sales in proceedings instituted by them.
Nor is this position at all affected by the doctrine that upon
the reversal of a judgment, under which a sale has been had, the
purchaser is entitled to a return of his money. There has been no
reversal of the judgment in the confiscation proceedings against
Conrad. On the contrary it has been affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.