58 Neb. 122 | Neb. | 1899
Andrew Bergtliold died intestate in Cuming county, Nebraska, in October, 1877, leaving a widow, Amelia, and three children. The deceased died the owner of certain real estate. About a year after Bergthold’s death his widow married one Ferdinand Sclunela, who was subsequently appointed administrator of Bergthold’s estate. Upon the petition of Schmela’s wife the probate court of Cuming county appointed her husband, Sclunela, the guardian of the three minor children of Bergtliold, deceased, the children being at that time nine, eleven, and thirteen years of age, respectively. This appointment of Sclunela as guardian was made about September’, 1885. On September 3,1887, the judge of the district court of Cuming county, in pursuance of the guardian’s petition therefor, granted him a license as such guardian to sell the real estate of his wards for the purpose of raising money to educate and support them. In pursuance of this license the guardian advertised and' sold at public auction the real estate of his wards to one Wenzel F. Kriz on September 30, 1887, and on October 14, 1887, executed and delivered to him a guardian’s deed for such real estate. George Korb, Jr., Charles Korb, and J. A. Johnson now claim title to the real estate through Kriz. The heirs of Bergthold, having become of age, brought this, an action in the nature of ejectment, in the district court of Cuming county against the Korbs and Johnson to recover possession, with rents and profits, of said real estate. The district court entered a judgment dismissing the action of the heirs, to l’eview which
1. Authority for a guardian to sell the land of his wards for their maintenance and education and the procedure regulating such sale are found in sections 42 to 64, both inclusive, of chapter 23, 'Compiled Statutes 1897. Section 54 of this chapter provides: “Every guardian licensed to sell real estate, as aforesaid, shall, before the sale, give bond to the judge of the district court with sufficient surety or sureties, to be approved by such judge, with condition to sell the same in the manner prescribed by law.” Section 64 of such chapter provides: “In case of an action relating to any estate sold by a guardian, under the provisions of this subdivision, in which the ward or any person claiming under him shall contest the validity of the sale, the same shall not be avoided on account of any irregularity in the proceedings, provided it shall appear: * * * Second — That he [the guardian] gave a bond which was approved by the judge of the district court, in case any bond was required by the court upon granting the license.” In the proceeding for the sale of his wards’ real estate instituted and carried on by the guardian he executed with sureties a bond, the judge of the district court of Chiming county being the obligee named therein. This bond was never presented to, nor in any manner approved by, the judge of said district court. It was, however, filed in the court and approved by the clerk thereof. The statute just quoted is mandatory, that a guardian licensed to sell his ward’s real estate shall, before the sale, give a bond to the judge of the district court, to be approved by such judge. Unless such bond be given and approved, a guardian appointed in this state has no authority or jurisdic
In this connection it is said by the defendant in error that the failure of the guardian to have the bond executed by him approved by the judge of the district court was an irregularity merely. The answer to this is, if it was an irregularity, it was such a one as the statute in effect prescribes shall avoid the sale.
Another contention of the defendant in error is that the provision of the statute requiring this bond to be approved by the judge of the district court is directory merely, and that this court held, in Myers v. McGavock, 39 Neb. 843, that such a bond need not be approved by the judge of the district court. The requirement of the statute that the district court shall approve this bond is not directory, but it is mandatory; and this court did
2. Section 55 of said chapter 23, among other things, provides: “Such guardian shall also, before fixing on the time and place of sale, take and subscribe an oath,” etc. The guardian fixed the time and place of sale of his wards’ real estate on September 5, 1887, by publishing the first notice of his sale on that date, in which he recited that the sale would occur, at a certain time and place on September 30. He took and filed the oath required by statute on September 30, whether before or after the hour fixed for the sale is not disclosed by the record. This 'did not comply with the statute. It required him to take and subscribe an oath “before fixingon the time and place of sale.” In effect he did not take and subscribe the oath required by the statute. The statute of Wisconsin on the subject under consideration provides that the guardian shall, “before fixing on the time and place of sale, take and subscribe an oath,” etc. In Blackman v. Baumann, 22 Wis. 611, a guardian was licensed by the court to sell his ward’s real estate for the latter’s education and maintenance. The sale occurred on December 10, 1850. The guardian took and subscribed the oath required by the statute on the same day. The court said: “For it appears that the guardian
3. An argument of the defendants in error is that the heirs are estopped from maintaining this suit because they, the defendants in error, at the time they purchased
But the defendants in error, though they may have paid a valuable consideration for this real estate, are not innocent purchasers of it. One who purchases real estate at a guardian’s sale, or purchases from the vendee of that sale, must take notice at his peril of the authoriiy of the guardian to make the sale. The doctrine of caveat cmptor applies to purchasers at guardians’ sales. The guardian in this case reported that on September 30, 1887, he had sold his wards’ real estate for $2,700 cash to one Wenzel F. Kriz. This report he filed in court on October 14,1887. On that same date the guardian executed and delivered
We are not deciding that where a guardian’s sale is absolutely void that any one can be .protected as an innocent purchaser for value of tbe real estate sold; but what we do say is that, if these defendants in error are to suffer a loss, it is tbe result of their own negligence. There was enough upon tbe face of tbis record to bave deterred any prudent man from investing bis money in tbis property. Tbe fact that defendants in error discharged liens upon tbis property put thereon by tbe wife of tbe guardian affords not the slightest reason why tbis real estate, when banded over to these heirs, should be burdened with tbe amount of those liens. Those liens were not upon tbe real estate when tbe title to it vested in tbe heirs upon their father’s death. We think tbe most tbe defendants in error are entitled to is to set off the taxes upon tbis real estate paid by them which were liens upon it against tbe rents and profits. If tbe money paid by defendants in error to tbe mother of these children for tbis real estate was by ber used toward tbe maintenance and education of ber children, tbe latter cannot be charged with it in favor of defendants in error. She was not their legal guardian. . No part of tbe money ex
Reversed and remanded.