[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 216 Affirming.
In January, 1928, appellant, Charles W. Wolverton, and appellees, Leslie B. Baynham and J.H. Baynham, entered into a contract for the purchase and sale of certain property in Fayette county, for the sum of $19,252.70.
This suit was instituted against the purchaser, Wolverton, for a specific performance of the contract. In defense, the appellant pleaded that the appellees could not convey a clear title to the land as they had contracted to do for the following reasons: The Baynhams acquired it from Metcalf and wife by deed of January 3, 1927, and Metcalf derived title under a deed of the master commissioner of the Fayette circuit court, of date February 6, 1926, conveying the title of the parties in a suit then pending in that court of W.S. Scott v. Mary S. Scott and others; the record and all the papers in the suit had been lost or misplaced, and could not be found; there was nothing in the record of the clerk's office showing the purpose of the suit or the grounds upon which the property was sold; and it further appeared there were some infant defendants in the case whose interest in the property was purported to be divested by the judgment. He asserted that, because of the loss of the papers in that suit, and the possibility of their disclosing the invalidity of the judgment if they should be found, the Baynhams' title to the property was uncertain and under a cloud, and, by reason thereof, they could not convey to him a clear, perfect, unincumbered, fee-simple title of record or a good merchantable title to the property.
By reply the Baynhams averred that the records of the Fayette circuit court showed the necessary and proper steps had been taken in the Scott suit, and, specifically setting out the various orders, pleaded that the *Page 217 judgment was regular in every particular. They denied their title to the property involved in this suit was uncertain or resting under a cloud, and stated they were able to convey a perfect title. The lost record in the Scott suit was practically supplied by the introduction of carbon duplicates of the pleadings, and the testimony of the guardian ad litem, attorneys practicing the case, and the officers of the court.
The judgment recites that, it —
"appearing to the court, from the proof taken herein, that the record in said action has been duly and sufficiently proven, and that all of the parties having any interest in said land were parties to said action and that the court had full jurisdiction of the parties to said action, and that said tract was duly and properly sold pursuant to judgment rendered in said action, and said sale was thereafter confirmed, and that no objections were made to said judgment or exceptions saved to same; that no exceptions were made to the sale and report thereof made by the Master Commissioner of said court, and said sale was duly confirmed and said tract was, pursuant to the order of this court, conveyed by the deed of the Master Commissioner of this court to the purchaser thereof at said sale, to-wit: Thomas Metcalf, and that said judgment and order of sale and order confirming said sale are now in full force and effect and have never been appealed from nor reversed, it is found ordered and adjudged that the plaintiffs, Leslie B. Baynham and J.H. Baynham, as vendees and owners of said land, claiming under said Thomas Metcalf, are now vested with a clear and perfect, unincumbered, fee-simple and marketable title to said tract of land."
The chancellor accordingly decreed a specific performance of the contract, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The agreement in the executory contract to convey a general warranty title implied the conveyance of a perfect, legal title to the property, and, if the vendors were unable to tender such title, their covenant would be broken, and the appellant, as vendee, would not be compelled to accept the deed, although it did contain a covenant *Page 218
of general warranty. Ethington v. Rigg,
While a purchaser must take notice of what the record reveals (Dotson v. Merritt,
There is no more reason to question the efficacy of a commissioner's deed than any other. Of course, it may be shown the judicial proceedings are void just as it may be shown that an individual grantor was without power to execute a deed. But that is not shown here. The record does not disclose either a deficient or missing link in the chain of title. It is only shown that the original papers in a judicial proceeding affecting the title has been misplaced, with the suggestion these might disclose such weakness or omission — a cloud based on a supposition only. The allegation that the vendee fears an attack upon the title to the property by some unnamed infant having an interest in the Scott suit is an altogether different thing than an allegation and proof of defective title, or *Page 219
an invalid judgment, and furnishes no basis for rescission or repudiation of the contract. McCrocklin v. O'Donaghue, etc.,
Although appellant's counsel say this is not a collateral attack on the Scott judgment, it certainly bears the earmarks of such; and it is well established that, in a collateral proceeding where the record shows jurisdictional facts, such verity is imparted to the judgment as to make it conclusive until reversed in some direct proceeding. Miracle v. Purcifull,
The mere misplacement of the papers in the Scott case cannot affect the integrity of the judgment and other entries in the permanent records of the court. When a judgment is entered, the pleadings, exhibits, and memorials of the proof become only evidential and historical, and it will be presumed they support the record. Considerations of public policy require that purchasers at judicial sales be protected in their ownership, and that faith in the integrity of such sales be established and maintained by attributing absolute verity to the decree and other court records. Under the circumstances of this case, nothing short of an affirmative showing that the proceedings in the former suit were in fact void could relieve the appellant from complying with his contract. In the absence of such disclosure, the court would have been justified in conclusively presuming their validity. Bamberger v. Green,
Even had this record not been so supplied and the suggested possibility continued to exist, the chancellor, on equitable principles, and in the exercise of the discretion vested in him, might well have enjoined the specific performance of the contract. The existence of a bare possibility of a defect in the chain of title is not sufficient to relieve a purchaser. 36 Cyc. 633. In the case of Duncan v. Glore,
"Although a purchaser of land cannot be compelled to take a doubtful title, he will not be permitted to object to a title on account of a bare possibility that it will prove defective. Elliott on Contracts, vol. 3, sec. 2332. On the facts presented we find no reason for holding that the deed tendered appellant by appellee will not convey him a good and merchantable title to the land in question."
The judgment is therefore affirmed.