66 Minn. 454 | Minn. | 1896
Action to determine adverse claims to real estate. Judgment for the plaintiff, that he is the owner thereof, from which the defendant Mabel Root appealed.
The plaintiff’s title depends on the question of the validity of an administrator’s sale of the land in controversy. (This is the only question in the case. The facts are undisputed, which are, so far as here material, these: On February 14, 1889, N. D. Root died intestate, seised of the S. of the S. W. of the S. W. \ of section 28, township 50, range 14, in the county of St. Louis. This was the only land he owned in the section named, or had any interest in. The appellant is a daughter and one of the heirs at law of Root. An administrator of his estate was appointed by the probate court of the proper county. Such proceedings were had in the probate court in the matter of the estate of Root that the court on August 5, 1889, made in such matter its order of license, wherein it
The only objections to the administrator’s sale here urged are (1) that the order of license and confirmation are void because of the irregularity in the description of the real estate therein authorized to be sold; (2) there was no sale bond given.
The appellant’s contention that the sale is void is based upon G-. S. 1894, § 4612, which provides that no sale of real estate by a guardian, executor, or administrator shall be avoided on account of a defect in the proceedings if it appears:
“(1) That the executor, administrator or guardian was licensed to make the sale, by the probate court having jurisdiction. (2) That he gave a bond which was approved by the probate court. (3) That he took the oath prescribed in this chapter. (4) That he gave notice of the time and place of sale as in this chapter prescribed, if such notice was required by the order of license. (5) That the premises were*457 sold in the maimer required by the order of license and the sale confirmed by the court, and that they are held by one who purchased them in good faith.”
The construction claimed for this statute by counsel for appellant is that it requires that the records of the probate court in the matter of the sale must show a strict compliance with the law relating to sales of real estate in probate courts, as to the five essentials named in section 4612. In the case of Kurtz v. St. Paul & D. R. Co., 61 Minn. 18, 63 N. W. 1, we referred to the origin, purpose, and history of this section of the statute. It was, in the state of its origin, where probate courts were courts of special jurisdiction, plainly a ■curative statute, designed to limit the causes for which a sale of real ■estate by proceedings in such courts could be assailed collaterally, .and not to open the door for its impeachment in cases where, except for the statute, it would be unimpeachable. After the adoption of ■our constitution, and our probate courts thereby b¡ecame courts of record and of superior jurisdiction, there was no necessity for retaining this statute. But prior to the decision of Davis v. Hudson, 29 Minn. 27, 11 N. W. 136, it seems to have been erroneously assumed that, after the adoption of the constitution, probate courts were still courts of special and limited jurisdiction, and that their records did not import absolute verity. Hence the statute was continued in force and re-enacted in the Eevision of 1866. It was intended as a curative statute, to obviate the insecurity of titles resulting from the supposed fact that probate courts of this state, like those of the ■states from which the statute came to us, were courts of special and limited jurisdiction. While the legal effect of this statute is the opposite of what was intended, opening instead of closing the door for assailing collaterally titles made through the probate court, yet it must be construed as a curative statute, as it was intended to be. The statute and the records of the probate court relating to the sale of real estate must be liberally construed, and land titles depending on such records sustained, notwithstanding any mere irregularities and technical omissions in the record as to the five essentials of a valid sale named in this statute.
The description of the land in the order of license and confirmation, standing alone, does not describe any particular 20 acres of the section. But the land sold, and accurately described in the report of
The sale bond in this case was a substantial compliance with the-statute. The obligors recite in the body of the instrument that it is sealed with their seals, but in fact there is no scroll or seal to-their names. Technically, then, it was not a bond, but it was given and approved by the court as a bond, and the obligors were liable-thereon to the same extent as though it was under seal. The omission of the scrolls was an irregularity, and the statute requiring a sale bond was substantially complied with. County of Redwood v. Tower, 28 Minn. 45, 8 N. W. 907.
Judgment affirmed.