The uniform current of decisions in this State, from Blount v. Mitchell, 1 N. C., 80, are to the effect that, upon sales by sheriffs or constables of personal property under execution, the property should be present at the sale and in the possession of the officer, so that immediate delivery may be made to the purchaser. These requirements are fulfilled, however, if it is in plain view, or so near that it may be perr sonally inspected by all present at the sale who may choose to examine it. The sale “ must be conducted in such a manner that every person who may come up before the articles are knocked down by the auctioneer may see and examine them, so as to enable him to become a bidder if he choose. To hold otherwise would be to give some of the persons present an advantage over others, and thus prevent that fair and open competition which the law so much desires in sales of this kind.” McNeely v. Hart, 8 Ired., 492. The reason of the rule is clearly stated in Ainsworth v. Greenlee, 3 Mur., 470: “The constable’s authority to sell these goods was derived under a fieri facias, the execution of which the law requires to be done in such a manner as that by the sale the propertj’’ is most likely to command the highest price in ready money. It is evident that for this purpose the bidder ought to have *462an opportunity of inspecting the goods and forming an estimate of their value, without which it is not to be expected that a fair equivalent will be bid. The presence of the goods, too, in the possession of the officer, to which possession the levy gives him a right, assures the bidders that a delivery will be made to the highest bidder forthwith, and that so far the object of the purchase will be attained without litigation.”
The present case is an apt illustration of the justice of the rule. The piano was left in a private room in a hotel, about two hundred and fifty yards from the place of sale; there were about fifty persons at the sale; an adjournment was had for half an hour in order to give all present an opportunity to visit the hotel and examine the piano. As many as three availed themselves of the invitation.. It is alleged in the complaint, and not denied in the answer, that the property sold for $32.50, the said sum being a small part of its actual value, although it is denied in the answer that the smallness of the sum bid wras occasioned by the absence from the place of sale of the article sold. And it further appears that the purchaser did not obtain possession from the Sheriff, but b}T means of a proceeding in claim and delivery. Who can tell that the apprehension of trouble in obtaining possession did not-deter persons present from bidding at the sale?
The law, so firmly established by repeated adjudications, is in no way weakened by the case of Wormell v. Nason, 83 N. C., 32, where printing presses and stands, property of a ponderous nature, and then in actual use and operation, conveyed by mortgage, with a general ppwer of sale unrestricted as to its place, were sold within fifty yards of the place where they were located and in use, the same being accessible to all who might wish to inspect them, and the sale was held to pass title, which, if impeachable at all, could only be questioned by the mortgagor and those claiming under him, in analogy to the rule in execution sales. Affirmed.