44 W. Va. 635 | W. Va. | 1898
In 1893 Annie M. Miller, solely under right to dower as widow of her deceased husband, J. T. Hoback, in a lot of land in Huntington,- filed her bill, making Henry Stanton Hoback (infant, and only heir of his father) defendant, and alleging that the land was not susceptible of partition or allotment without detriment to the property, and praying that her dower be assigned and set apart to her, and that, if the property was not susceptible of allotment of dower in kind, it be sold, and she be given a gross sum in lieu of dower in kind. Under a decree in said suit the land was sold, and purchased by Mrs. Miller. Later she gave a deed of trust on the property to the Wheeling Title & Trust Company, to secure a loan made to her by the Mutual German Savings & Loan Association. A sale was made under this trust to said savings association. Still later, said infant, Henry Stanton Hoback, filed a bill to set aside said decree of sale, and the sale and deed of trust, and the sale under it; and, a decree having been rendered granting such relief, said savings and loan association appealed.
The briefs are very pointed, able, and helpful in the decision of the case. It is clear that an infant, until six months after majority, may set aside a decree prejudicial to him, for mere error. Lafferty v. Lafferty, 42 W. Va. 783, (26 S. E. 262). As the sale itself is attacked in this case, and title conferred by it on Mrs. Miller, and that conferred on third parties by her deed of trust is sought to be annulled, we are led to inquire whether the decree is not merely erroneous, but void. Mrs. Miller had right to
The question next is, does the want of law' to support the widow’s bill to sell land render the decree void? Had the court jurisdiction to entertain a bill by a widow, without any other cause of action or right than her dower right, to sell an infant’s land? The law of jurisdiction is close and complicated. There are many rules, but each case largely molds its decision. It is a serious matter to hold decrees and judgments void, on which titles rest, as in this case, and we must be clear in opinion to do so. One general rule is that, if the court has jurisdiction of cases ejusdem generis (of the same class), its judgment is not void, even if erroneous, because of some error in the mode of procedure, or because the facts did not warrant the judgment in that particular case. Test this casé by this rule. The court has jurisdiction to sell land for debt in partition cases, in suits by guardians to sell infants’ lands, as in those cases the law gives the right to act; but no law gave the right to act in this matter. The mere power to
The question occurred to me whether those claiming under the trust deed could be affected, as purchasers for value without notice, — the rule being that a court of equity will take no step against such a purchaser; but this is answered by the consideration that a purchaser is bound to notice rights of others appearing in his title, and defects of jurisdiction in the proceedings under which he claims. The bill in this case told them of this want of jurisdiction. They were bound to know the law. While a purchaser is bound to notice the rights of others appearing in his chain of title (16 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 798),. the question arose in my mind whether he was bound to know the law, and put the proper legal construction on papers, and in this case to know that the law denied jurisdiction. The law binds him to properly construe wills and deeds, and know their law, and I do not see why the same principle does not apply where the record shows want of jurisdiction. Story, Eq. Jur. § 400; Tongue v. Nutwell, 79 Am. Dec. 649; Fallon v. Chidester, 26 Am. Rep. 164; Johnson v. Thweatt, 18 Ala. 741. Just now I recall that the case of Williamson v. Jones, 43 W. Va. 562, (27 S. E. 411), holds this doctrine, binding a purchaser to know the law of a case under which he purchased. For these reasons, we affirm the decree.
Affirmed^