20 Tex. 429 | Tex. | 1857
The question upon this appeal is, whether the curator’s sale and deed, of the 15th of November, 1834, was rightly held by the Court valid and effectual to pass and vest title in the purchaser. And we are of opinion that it was. It was executed before the Judge, and it therefore evidences his authorization and approval of the sale. It is to be deemed in the nature, in so far, of a judicial act, and affords grima facie evidence, at least, of the truth of the facts it recites. It affords all the proof that ought, at this day, to be required of the legality of the sale. Upon a similar question, the Supreme Court of Louisiana say, the ground taken, in opposition to the validity of a Probate sale, by the parties seeking to impeach it, “ goes to charge the curator and the Court with a culpable neglect of duty, and it must be proved by them, though it involves a negative.” (2 Ann. 508.) The objection the Court were considering was, that no attorney was appointed to represent absent heirs, as required by the Act of 1817, and no citation was issued before the judgment ordering the sale. The evidence was that of a subsequent Judge of the same Court, that he had searched the records, (in 1845,) and found no appointment of any attorney to represent the absent heirs, and no citation issued before the judgment ordering the sale of the property, (in 1825,) to any one purporting to be attorney of absent heirs. The Court held the evidence insufficient to invalidate the sale, observing that, “ considering the time and the locality when and where these proceedings took place, the evidence alleged is not satisfactory, and probably would not be so in any case. It is well known that in the remote parishes of the State, for the want of suitable buildings and responsible keepers, proper care has not been taken of judicial records, that many are entirely lost, and that those which remain are often in an incomplete and dilapidated state. Much the greater part of the real property of the State is held under Probate or Sheriffs’ sales; and if the validity of the titles thus acquired during the last forty years was to be tested by the judicial records as they may exist at any subsequent epoch, time, instead of healing, as it should, the defects of those titles, would
Judgment affirmed.