33 Ala. 65 | Ala. | 1858
—Erom the statements of the complainant’s bill it appears, that as to the quarter-section of land therein described, William McCoy was entitled to claim the benefit of the pre-emption laws, but died before consummating his claim; that his administrator did not have the money belonging to the estate, with which to enter the said land J that the estate was insolvent; that it was agreed between the administrator, John Lay and the complainant, that complainant should advance one hundred dollars, and said John Lay should advance one hundred dollars, and each should pay the sum so advanced into the land-office for the purpose of paying for said land, and that the administrator should take the certificate in the name of his intestate, and should then expose the land to sale, by order of the orphans’ court, and “ the said Lay or complainant should buy in the same; and the purchaser should repay to the other the amount of one hundred dollars, so as aforesaid advanced, and then p>ay the bid, after deducting the sum of two hundred dollars, so as
As William McCoy was entitled to claim the benefit of the pre-emption laws, as to the land described in the bill, but died before consummating his claim, the entry of the land should have been made in favor of “the heirs” of said William McCoy—5 TJ. S. Statutes at large, 620, § 2. But, if the patent had issued to him after his death, the title to the land would have enured to, and become vested in his heirs, under the act of congress approved May 20, 1886.—Public Land Laws, 1 voh, 540. The land was not subject to sale under the order of the orphans’ court, and the sale under such order was a nullity—Johnson v. Col
It is a party to that illegal contract who is here applying for relief; and the relief he is seeking is either to get the land of the heirs, contrary to law, or to be absolved from the consequences of the position in which he placed himself by the illegal contract and his conduct in carrying it into execution. A court of equity cannot aid him; it leaves him where he has placed himself by his illegal agreement and his conduct in execution of it.—See May v. Moore, at this term, and authorities there cited.
Decree affirmed, at the costs of appellant.