1. A bidder at a judicial sale at public auction, whose bid has
not been accepted, the sale being adjourned for sufficient cause
and finally discontinued, cannot insist, even though he have been
the highest and best bidder, on leave to pay the amount of his bid
and have a confirmation of the sale to him.
2. The marshal or other officer who makes a sale of real
property under a decree of foreclosure, possesses the power, for
good cause shown, in the exercise of a sound discretion and in
subordination to the superior control of the court over the whole
matter of the sale, to adjourn the sale from time to time.
3. In a case where the decree was that the sale should be made
unless the mortgagors should previously pay the mortgage
debt, a few short adjournments for the purpose of enabling the
mortgagors to make an arrangement to pay it are adjournments for
sufficient cause, although such adjournments have been made by
direction of the complainant's solicitor. And if, prior to the day
to which the sale stands adjourned, the mortgagors come in and pay
the complainants the amount of the decree &c., the sale may
properly be discontinued altogether.
The Milwaukee & Chicago Railroad having mortgaged their
railroad, and suit having been brought in the federal court for
Wisconsin to foreclose the mortgage, a decree was obtained that the
mortgaged premises should be sold at
Page 70 U. S. 197
public auction, under the direction of the marshal,
unless the mortgagors, previously to such sole, should pay to
the complainants the sum of $254,175 -- the amount of the
decree. The marshal accordingly offered the premises for sale on
the 6th of June, 1862, but no bids being received, he adjourned it
"by direction of the complainant's solicitor," to the 19th of the
same month, at the same hour and place. At the time and place of
adjournment he put up the premises again, and one Blossom bid
$250,000 for them, this being the highest and best bid received at
that time. Fearing that the property would be sacrificed if the
sale should be completed, the agent of the stockholders applied to
the
solicitors of the complainants, requesting that the
sale might be postponed for a short time to enable the respondents
to make some arrangements to pay the amount of the decree without a
sale of the property.
The solicitors gave such directions,
and the marshal again adjourned the sale, the adjournment being to
the 21st June -- two days -- and the marshal giving notice that at
the expiration of this time the sale would be opened at the same
hour and place, and with the bid of $250,000 already made by
Blossom. During these two days, the mortgagors made arrangements to
pay the mortgage, but had not been able by the 21st to have the
money actually in hand. The sale, after being opened and after
Blossom had increased his bid to the full amount of the mortgage
debt -- but no other bids being received -- was again adjourned
by direction of the complainant's solicitor, this
adjournment being to the 1st October, 1862, and being also the
second adjournment made by direction of the solicitor aforesaid,
after the bid of $250,000 had been made. On this 1st October the
sale was again opened, and by the same direction further adjourned
till the 15th January, 1863, this being, of course, the third
adjournment made by the same direction, and after Blossom's bid.
Previous to this 15th January, however, the company had paid the
amount of the decree, and the marshal, by order of the
complainant's solicitor, discontinued the sale
altogether.
On the 9th October, 1862, Blossom, by petition to the
Page 70 U. S. 198
court below -- sworn to and stating that "he made both bids in
good faith, and has been ever since and now is ready to comply with
his said bid, and hereby offers to bring that amount into court" --
applied to have the sale confirmed to him on his bid as increased
to the full amount of the decree of foreclosure and sale, but the
court denied the petition, and he appealed here.
It having been lately decided in this Court, on a motion to
dismiss his appeal, that he was entitled to be heard here,
[
Footnote 1] his case now came
on upon its merits.
Page 70 U. S. 203
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondents mortgaged their railroad to certain trustees as a
security for moneys loaned and advances of various kinds and to
defray the current expenses of operating the railroad and of
keeping the same in repair. Suit was brought by the trustees and
certain creditors, named in the bill of complaint, to foreclose the
mortgage for a breach of the conditions, and the cause proceeded to
a decree of foreclosure and of sale. Substance of the decree was
that the mortgaged premises should be sold at public auction under
the direction of the marshal of the district unless the mortgagors
should pay to the complainants, previous to the sale, the sum of
two hundred and fifty-four thousand one hundred and seventy-five
dollars, with interest from the date of the decree. Pursuant to
that decree, the marshal, on the 6th day of June, 1862, offered the
mortgaged premises for sale, but as no bids were received, he
adjourned the sale, under the instructions of the solicitors of the
complainants, to the 19th day of the same month, at the same hour
and place.
Report of the marshal also shows that he again offered the
premises for sale at the time and place of adjournment, and that
the appellant bid for the same the sum of two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars, which was the highest and best
Page 70 U. S. 204
bid received at that time. Fearing that the stock would be
sacrificed if the sale should be completed, the agent of the
stockholders made application to the solicitors of the complainants
requesting that the sale might be postponed for a short time to
enable the respondents to make some arrangements to pay the
mortgage debt without a sale of the property. Yielding to that
suggestion, the solicitors gave such directions, and the marshal
accordingly adjourned the sale for the period of two days, giving
notice at the time that the sale at the expiration of that period
would be again opened at the same hour and place, and that the bid
of the appellant would be regarded as pending.
Such an arrangement having been negotiated during those two
days, a further adjournment became necessary to enable the parties
to carry it into effect; but when the sale was opened for that
purpose, the appellant was present and increased his bid to the
full amount of the mortgage debt, including interest, costs, and
expenses of sale. No other bids having been made, the sale was
adjourned, as directed, to the 1st day of October, and afterwards
to the 15th day of January following, but before the day to which
the last adjournment was made the respondents paid the amount of
the decree to the complainants, and the sale was discontinued.
Record also shows that the appellant applied to the court by
petition on the 9th day of October, 1862, to have the sale
confirmed to him on his bid as increased to the full amount of the
decree of foreclosure and sale, but the court denied the prayer of
the petition, and from that order the petitioner appealed to this
Court.
1. Appellant contends that inasmuch as he bid the full amount of
the decree, interest, and costs at a time when the mortgaged
premises were duly offered for sale, and inasmuch as his bid was
the highest and best bid offered for the premises, it became and
was the duty of the marshal to have struck off the property to him
as the legal purchaser of the same, and that the district court
erred in denying his petition for the confirmation of the sale. On
the other hand, the respondents
Page 70 U. S. 205
deny that any sale was ever made, and insist that the bid of the
appellant was a mere offer of purchase, which he might withdraw at
any time before the bid was accepted or the property was struck off
to him, and an entry to that effect was made by the marshal.
2. Sales of mortgaged premises under a decree of foreclosure and
sale are usually made in the federal courts by the marshal of the
district where the decree was entered or by the master appointed by
the court, as directed in the decree. Such sales must be made by
the person designated in the decree, or under his immediate
direction and supervision, but he may employ an auctioneer to
conduct the sale if it be made in his presence. Express directions
of the decree in this case were that the mortgaged premises should
be sold at public auction unless the respondents, as mortgagors,
should, previously to such sale, pay to the complainants the amount
of the mortgage debt, as specified in the decree.
3. Contracts for the purchase and sale of goods or lands at
public auction are contracts founded upon mutual promises and a
mutuality of obligation, and consequently they cannot be regarded
as having been perfected and made binding unless they have received
the consent of the parties. Consent of parties being essential to
the contract set up in this case, it becomes important to ascertain
in what way and to what extent such assent must be manifested and
to distinguish accurately between mere offers or proposals by the
one party not accepted or approved by the other and mutual and
positive engagements which neither party can retract or withdraw.
[
Footnote 2]
Unaccepted offers to enter into a contract bind neither party,
and can give rise to no cause of action, as, for example, if one
merchant offer to sell goods to another, such an offer is not
binding until it has been in some form accepted by the party to
whom it was made. Liability cannot arise in such a case, because
the party making the offer cannot
Page 70 U. S. 206
be held answerable to the other for not selling the goods unless
that other by accepting the offer has bound himself to
purchase.
4. Biddings at an auction, says Mr. Addison, are mere offers,
which may be retracted at any time before the hammer is down and
the offer has been accepted. [
Footnote 3] Leading case upon that subject is that of
Paine v. Cave, [
Footnote
4] where it was expressly held that every bidding at an auction
is nothing more than an offer on one side until it has received the
assent of the auctioneer as the agent of the owner. Supreme Court
of Pennsylvania held, in the case of
Fisher v. Leitzer,
[
Footnote 5] that a bidder at a
sheriff's sale has a right to retract his bid before the property
is struck down to him, and that the sheriff has no right to
prescribe conditions which will deprive him of such a right.
Express ruling was that a bid at an auction before the hammer falls
is like an offer before acceptance, and that when the bid is
withdrawn before it is accepted, there is no contract, and that
such a bidder cannot be regarded in any sense as a purchaser. Rule,
as laid down in the last edition of "Story on Sales," is
substantially the same as that adopted in the preceding case.
Speaking of ordinary sales at an auction, the author says that the
seller may withdraw the goods or the bidder may retract his bid at
any time before they are struck off, and the reason assigned for
the rule is that so long as the final consent of both parties is
not signified by the blow of the hammer, there is no mutual
agreement to a definite proposition. [
Footnote 6] But as soon as the hammer is struck down, says
the same author, the bargain is considered as concluded and the
seller has no right afterwards to accept a higher bid nor the buyer
to withdraw from the contract. [
Footnote 7] Same rules prevail upon a sale under common
law process as in other cases of sales at
Page 70 U. S. 207
public auction, so far as respects the question now before the
Court. Until the property is actually struck off to the bidder, he
may withdraw his bid as a mere offer or proposition. [
Footnote 8]
5. Judicial sales made under the decretal orders of courts of
chancery are also, in this country, governed substantially by the
same rules, except that such sales are usually made by the marshal
or a master in chancery acting as an officer of the court, and are
always regarded as under the control of the court and subject to
the power of the court to set the sale aside for good cause shown
or open it any time before it has been confirmed if the
circumstances of the case require the exercise of that power.
Doubtless such sales are usually conducted under the advice of the
solicitor of the complainant, and it is sometimes said that the
solicitor, in all questions arising between the vendor and
purchaser, must be considered as the agent of all the parties to
the suit; but it is believed that the remark must be received with
some qualification. [
Footnote
9] Suppose it to be so, however, in a qualified sense, still it
is true that the marshal or master, as the case may be, is the
officer of the court, and that as such his acts and proceedings are
subject to the revision and control of the court. [
Footnote 10] In sales directed by a court
of chancery, says Judge Story, the whole business is transacted by
a public officer under the guidance and superintendence of the
court itself. Even after the sale is made, it is not final until a
report is made to the court and it is approved and confirmed.
Either party may object to the report, and the purchaser himself,
who becomes a party to the sale, may appear before the court, and
if any mistake has occurred, may have it corrected. He therefore
becomes a party to the proceeding, and may represent and defend his
own interest, and may be compelled by process of the court to
comply with the terms of the contract. [
Footnote 11]
Page 70 U. S. 208
6. Subject to those qualifications and perhaps some others which
need not be noticed, the question of sale or no sale, when it
arises under a state of facts such as are exhibited in this record,
may be fully tested by substantially the same rules as those which
apply in cases of sales under common law process or in other cases
of sales at public auction. Tested by those rules, it is clear to a
demonstration that there was no sale of the mortgaged premises in
this case, because the property was never struck off to the
appellant, nor was his bid, by act or word or in any manner, ever
accepted by the seller, and the record shows that, at the hearing
in the court below, nothing of the kind was pretended by the
appellant. Instead of setting up that pretense, his complaint was
that the marshal erred in refusing to accept his bid, which, if
possible, is less defensible upon the facts and circumstances of
the case than the theory of the sale and purchase.
7. Officers appointed under such decrees and directed to make
such sales have the power to accomplish the object, but they are
usually invested with a reasonable discretion as to the manner of
its exercise, which they are not at liberty to overlook or
disregard. Acting under the decree, they have duties to perform to
the complainant, to the vendor and purchaser, and to the court, and
they are bound to exercise their best judgment in the performance
of all those duties. Such an officer, in acting under such a
decree, if directed to sell the property, should adopt all
necessary and proper means to fulfill the directions; but he should
at the same time never lose sight of the fact that unless he is
restricted by the terms of the decree, the time and manner of
effecting the sale are in the first instance vested in his sound
discretion. Usual practice undoubtedly is that the officer in
selling the property acts under the advice of the solicitor of the
complainant, but it cannot be admitted that his advice is, under
all circumstances, obligatory upon the officer.
Granting that solicitors may properly advise the officer, still
it must be borne in mind that the authority and discretion
Page 70 U. S. 209
in making the sale are to a certain extent primarily vested in
the officer designated in the decree. Unreasonable directions of
the solicitor are not obligatory and should not be followed, as if
the solicitor should direct the property to be struck off at great
sacrifice when but a single bidder attended the sale. Under such
circumstances, the officer might well refuse to do as he was
directed, and he might be justified in postponing the sale to a
future day to prevent the sacrifice of the property. Every such
officer has a right to exercise a reasonable discretion to adjourn
such a sale, and all that can be required of him is that he should
have proper qualifications, use due diligence in ascertaining the
circumstances, and act in good faith and with an honest intention
to perform his duty.
General rule is that a sheriff is not bound to obey the
directions of the attorney of the creditor to make an unreasonable
sale of the property of the debtor if he sees that the time
selected or other attending circumstances will be likely to produce
great sacrifice of the property; but he may in such a case, if he
thinks proper, postpone the sale, especially if it appears that the
creditor will not sustain any considerable injury by the delay; and
no reason is perceived why the same rule may not be safely applied
in judicial sales made under the decretal order of a court of
chancery.
8. Courts often say that an auctioneer is solely the agent of
the seller of the goods until the sale is effected, and that then
he becomes also the agent of the purchaser for certain purposes;
but the marshal or master, in carrying out a decretal order, is
more than an auctioneer. They have duties to perform for all
concerned, and in the performance of those duties they may adjourn
the sale for good cause shown. Repeated decisions have established
that rule, and in the leading case of
Collier v. Whipple,
[
Footnote 12] the court went
further and held that such an officer was bound to exercise a
reasonable discretion in that matter. Same rule had been
previously
Page 70 U. S. 210
sanctioned in numerous cases, [
Footnote 13] and was expressly laid down by the
chancellor in the case of
Kelley v. Israel, [
Footnote 14] which is one of the
latest cases upon the subject.
But the record shows in this case that the bid of the appellant
was never accepted and that the adjournments were made by the
direction of the solicitors of the complainants to enable the
respondents to pay the mortgage debt and save the mortgaged
property from sacrifice. Negotiations to that effect were opened
between the parties to the suit on the day the first bid of the
appellant was made, and they were completed within two days, so
that all concerned knew, or might have known, that a sale had
become unnecessary. Subsequent postponement took place to enable
the respondents to carry the arrangements into effect. They paid
the debt and the complainants executed a discharge for the same.
Justice has been done, and all are satisfied except the appellant,
and he has no just ground of complaint.
Decree affirmed with costs.
[
Footnote 1]
Blossom v. Railroad
Co., 1 Wall. 655.
[
Footnote 2]
Addison on Contracts (ed. 1857) 23-154.
[
Footnote 3]
Addison on Contracts (ed. 1857) 26.
[
Footnote 4]
3 Term 148.
[
Footnote 5]
23 Pa.St. 308.
[
Footnote 6]
1 Sugden on Vendors and Purchasers 25.
[
Footnote 7]
Rutlidge v. Grant, 4 Bingham 653;
Cook v.
Oxley, 3 Term 654;
Adams v. Linsdell, 1 Barnewall
& Alderson 681; Story on Sales § 461.
[
Footnote 8]
Crocker on Sheriffs 201.
[
Footnote 9]
Dalby v. Pullen, 1 Russel & Mylne 296.
[
Footnote 10]
Collier v. Whipple, 13 Wendell 229.
[
Footnote 11]
Smith v. Arnold, 5 Mason 420.
[
Footnote 12]
13 Wendell 229.
[
Footnote 13]
Tinkham v. Purdy, 5 Johnson 345;
McDonald v.
Neilson, 2
id. 190;
Keightly v. Birch, 3
Campbell 321;
Leader v. Denney, 1 Bosanquet & Puller
359.
[
Footnote 14]
11 Paige 154.