4 Ga. 148 | Ga. | 1848
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The other objections to the deed being read in evidence, and the exceptions to the charge of the Court being substantially the. same, will be considered together.
In this State, on the death of the ancestor intestate, his lands-descend to his heirs at law, the title to which, is subject to be divested for the payment of debts, in the manner prescribed by the General Assembly.
On the death of John Clements, the intestate, the title to his lands was cast upon his heh-s, one of whom is now the lessor of the plaintiff. The title of the heir is sought to be divested' by an administrator’s sale of the premises in dispute.
The Act of 1816 provides, that on the application of the administrator, it shall be lawful for the - Inferior Courts in the several counties in this State, when sitting for Ordinary purposes, to order a sale of a part or the whole-of the real estate of the intes
"Whenever, in the judgment of the Court of Ordinary, it fully and plainly appears, to be for the benefit of the heirs and creditors of the intestate’s estate, that the real estate of the decedent should be sold, then and not otherwise, is .the administrator empowered to make sale thereof, and divest the heirs of their title.
An administrator in this State, as we have seen, derives his power and authority to convey the real estate of his intestate, from the statute. Does the record before us disclose that the requisitions of the statute were complied with by the administrator, in making sale of his intestate’s real estate %
The authority to make the sale is shown, and we presume the' Court of Ordinary required all the law requires to have been done, before granting the order to sell, and we shall not go behind-that judgment.
In Hartwell vs. Root, 19 John. Rep. 347, the general rule is stated to be, that when a person is required to do a certain act, the omission of which would make him guilty of a culpable neglect of duty, it ought to be intended that he has duly performed it, unless the contrary can be shown.
It being a duty imposed on the administrator by law, to advertise the land sixty days previous to the sale, and to sell it between the lawful hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in the month, the law will presume that he has done so when recited in the deed of conveyance, until the contrary is shown. But it may be asked, if the law presumes the administrator has done his duty, why not presume he has done so without the particular acts being recited in the deed 1 The deed is the muniment of title delivered to the purchaser by the administrator, as the agent of the law, and should show upon its face that the requisitions of the law have been complied with, which would divest the heirs of their title, and transfer the same to the purchaser. The statute authorizes the administrator to make the sale, on certain terms and conditions, and, as the agent of the law, he ought to state on the face of his conveyance that the terms and conditions required by the law have been performed — to show on the face of his conveyance, that he conveys as administrator, and that he is acting under the authority of, and in obedience to, the law, from which he derives all his power to make it. We think too, that the presumption is strengthened by a written recital of the administrator in his official capacity, when making the deed. It is his official declaration, in writing, that the requisitions of the law have been complied with. In this case, the administrators have recited a part of the acts enjoined by the law to be done, in their deed; but it is silent as to the others. What is the legal presumption? We must presume that they stated the truth as far as they pretended to state, and that they omitted to state the land had been advertised and sold between the lawful hours of sale, because the facts wouldnot