18 Tex. 179 | Tex. | 1856
It is insisted on behalf of the appellant, that the title of the defendant, which he seeks to have set aside and annulled, is void for want of jurisdiction in the Probate Court of Bexar county to order the sale.
To the order of sale of the March and April Terms, 1848, it is objected, that it was made on motion of the administrator, and not upon petition of any creditor, heir, legatee, or next friend of a ward, as provided in the Act of the 25th of February, 1843. (Hart. Dig. Art. 1067.) To the order of the March Term of the Court 1844, it is objected, that it was made after the administration had been closed, and the functions and powers of the administrator had ceased.
The Statute of 1843 does not prohibit the Probate Court
Nor did the Statute of 1843 require that the application to the Court for the sale of property should be by petition in writing. And the case, therefore, is not within the principle of the decision in Finch v. Edmonson, 9 Tex. R. 504. It has been assumed, generally, that a petition was necessary to give jurisdiction to the Probate Court to order a sale of the prop
In the case of Tucker v. Harris, (13 Geo. R. 1,) the Supreme Court of Georgia held their Courts of Ordinary—constituted as our Courts of Probate are—Courts of general jurisdiction over testate and intestate estates ; that their judgments relative to that subject matter, stand upon the same footing as the judgments of any other Court of general jurisdiction. “The “jurisdiction being established,” the Court says, “ all presump- “ tions must be made in favor of what does not appear. The “ Court having the right to decide upon the application ; the “ purchaser is not bound to go behind the judgment of the “ Court.”
The Court quote and approve the case of Duval’s heirs v. McLoskey, (1 Ala. R. N. S. 708,) where, under a Statute of the State of Alabama, which required that the executor or administrator shall “ file ” a petition in open Court, prescribing what it shall contain, as the initiatory step towards obtaining an order for the sale of the real estate of the testator'or intestate, the Supreme Court of that State held, that the order of sale could not be considered invalid, because the record did not show affirmatively that the petition was filed. As the Court went on to render its decree, the Court held, it could not be intended, from the absence of such a paper merely, that it was never filed ; but the intendment most rational, would be that it was lost after the rendition of the order.
The Court also cite the case of Thompson v. Tolmie, (2 Peters’ R. 165,) where the order of sale was under a-Statute
Judge Lumpkin also cites the case of Kennedy v. Nachsmith, which, he says, was decided in the Supreme Court at Philadelphia, and makes the following quotation and observation upon the case : 44 The Court say ' Beyond the decree, the purchaser ''is not bound to look. The inquiries upon ejectment are: ''was there an administrator and order to sell, such as would ''authorize the administrator to make sale ? was the sale fair ? ''If so the settled rule is, de fide et officio judicis, non recipitur “ questio. And it is asserted that no sale in that State ever ''has been declared void in ejectment, against a purchaser bona “fide, for any alleged irregularity in the Orphans’ Court; or '' because the decree of the Court was founded on mistake.”
The Georgia Court hold that the jurisdiction of the Orphans’ Court existed potentially from the death of the testator or intestate ; and they quote, upon this subject, the language of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in the case of McPherson v. Cunliff, (11 Serg. & Rawle, cited by us in Burdett v. Silsbee, 15 Tex. R. 617,) as follows : ''The matter which gives “the Orphans’ Court jurisdiction, is the death of the owner intestate ; for if administration were taken out on the effects of ''a living man, or of one who died testate, the administration ''itself would be void, and there could be no administrator to ''act—no party before the Court; consequetly all the pro-''ceedings would be null. Where an executor obtains pay-
It does not affirmatively appear by the record in this case, that the application was. not made by a petition in writing. But if it did so appear, I apprehend it could not, on principle, be held to defeat the Probate Court of its jurisdiction to order the sale on the application of an administrator ; nor could the purchaser be affected by the irregularity, if such it was, in making the order. He was not required to look beyond the judgment of a Court of competent jurisdiction.
As respects the order of 1844, though there does appear an entry in the minutes of a Court, of a former Term, that the administrator’s final account be admitted and filed, and “he discharged “ upon paying costsit is not an absolute and final settlement and discharge. The case, described by its title, thus : “No. 52, Estate of E. Alexander, deceased,” was continued upon the docket of the Probate Court: the authority of the administrator continued to be recognized by the Court, until after the order, and report, and approval of the sale of 1844, and his final account of his administration thereafter rendered; and he was finally discharged upon paying costs ; with which last order he complied. Notwithstanding the previous entry in the minutes, it was disregarded, and he went on to administer, and to close the administration, with the sanction of the
The present is a very different case from that of Hurt v. Horton. (12 Tex. R. 285.) There the property was legally sold, and the administration finally closed and settled. Nearly two years after the final settlement and discharge of the administrator, he again applied for and obtained a grant of administration on the estate, without showing any necessity for a renewal of his administration ; and proceeded again to sell the same property to another purchaser. The first purchaser protested, but the Court proceeded, notwithstanding, to confirm the sale to the second purchaser. It was held, and rightly, that the estate having been fully administered, and closed, a second administration upon the same estate, and the same property, which had already been administered upon, was a nullity, and the second sale void. The present is a very different case. The estate was not fully administered, nor the administrator absolutely and finally discharged by the Court; but on the contrary he continued to act as administrator and the Court recognized and approved his acts as such. And upon the repeated decisions of this Court, it must be held, that, the order of sale and sale were effectual to pass the title to the purchaser. There is therefore no error in the judgment and it is afiirmed.
Judgment affirmed.