25 Wis. 525 | Wis. | 1870
Both parties admit that the title to the premises in question was in Patrick Howe at. the time of Ms death. The plaintiffs claim the undivided three-fonrths as his heirs-at-law; the defendants claim the whole under his administrator’s sale. It is claimed that this sale was invalid, for the reason that the premises were the homestead of Patrick Howe at the time of his death, and, therefore, not liable to be sold by his administrator. The fact that they were snch homestead was clearly proved, and not disputed. As his death occurred within a year or two after 1850, the exact time not appearing, .the provisions of chapter 198, Laws of 1850, were applicable, and left the homestead liable to administrator’ s sale only for the payment of debts contracted prior to the passage of that act. We agree with the respondent’ s counsel that the question whether the premises were the homestead was a jurisdictional one, and one which, upon the record of the probate court here presented, can be raised collaterally to show that the administrator’s sale was void. The general question of the right of every party against whom an alleged judgment or judicial proceeding is introduced, to inquire collaterally into the question of jurisdiction, whether arising upon the service of process or in relation to the subject-matter, has been very fully considered by this court in the cases referred to by counsel, and such right has been uniformly sustained. But in the case of Warner v. Howland, 10 Wis. 8, we attempted to state the distinction between an entire absence of jurisdiction, — a lack of authority in the tribunal to take cognizance at all of the subject it had decided, — and those cases where the court is authorized to enter a certain judgment or order upon a particular state of facts, and, as preliminary to such action, to inquire whether the particular facts exist or not. And we held that in the latter cases, the existence of such facts, although the essential foundation of the right of the court to proceed further, yet was not jurisdictional, '
I am strongly of the opinion, that, inasmuch as the probate'and county courts have jurisdiction to hear and determine all applications by administrators for license to sell the real estate of their decedents which is liable to sale, this necessarily involves the power of determining whether in any particular case the real estate sought to be sold is • so liable or not. Such a power must exist somewhere, and wherever it does exist, when the fact is once properly alleged and decided, I do not readily see any reason why the determination would not have the same effect that ordinarily belongs to decisions by judicial tribunals, of questions which they are authorized to decide. And if in this case it had been alleged, before the probate court which authorized the sale, that the land was not the homestead of the decedent, and the court had so found, or if, being the homestead, it had been alleged that there were valid debts contracted prior to the act of 1850, for which it was necessary to sell it, and the court had so found, it would be difficult for me to take the case out of my own reasoning, in Wanzer v. Howland, or to distinguish it from Brittain v. Kinnaird, 1 Brod. & Bing. 432, which I there cited with approbation. Upon this point I have stated only my own views.
But we all agree that whatever effect might be given to the order of license made by the probate court in this case, if the facts above indicated, involving the liability of the land to sale, had been alleged and determined, still, where this does not appear, the fact remains open
Upon proof that the property was a homestead and not liable to sale by an administrator, to sustain a title under such sale against the heirs, if it can be sustained in any event,, the record of the probate court granting the license should show affirmatively an adjudication that the property was not the homestead, or that there were debts contracted prior to the act of 1850 for which it was necessary to sell it. In this record neither of these facts appears. There is no allegation upon them in the petition, and no finding upon them by the court; though it did appear and was recited in the license that the forty acres authorized to be sold was all the land the decedent owned. This, of course, was not conclusive that it was his homestead, though it rendered it highly probable, and tends to support the theory, with which the record is entirely consistent, that the probate court assumed the power to authorize the sale regardless of thé question whether it was a homestead or not.
The vouchers, filed by the administrator on the settle-. ment of his account subsequent to the sale, are no part
There is only one item that purports to have been for any debt of the deceased contracted prior to the act of 1850, and that was the doctor’s bill of $6.75, which, it is said in the case, was for services in 1849 and 1850; so that even this may have been almost entirely contracted after the passage of that act. This debt was never allowed by commissioners, nor the judge of probate, and there was no allegation or finding that any part of it was contracted prior to that act. Nothing but the form of the bill for the services shows that fact.
For the reason, therefore,' that the record of the probate court fails to show any allegation or finding that the land was not the homestead, or that it was liable, though a homestead, to sale for any debt contracted prior to the act of 1850, the sale must be held void.
If the lands descended to the heirs, released from any liability for the debts of their ancestor, although the family was afterward broken up, and the premises ceased to constitute its homestead, they would not thereby become liable to such sale.
The act of 1858, providing that on the death of the owner the homestead shall descend to the widow,- who shall hold the same during her widowhood, which seems to be relied on by the appellant’s counsel, has no application to the case. The owner having died several years before that act was passed, the homestead descended according to the law then in force.
The right of dower before assignment, being an inchoate right, cannot be so transferred by the widow to a stranger as to enable him to set it up as a defense to an action of ejectment by the heirs-at-law. See the authorities .cited
There were no errors in the rulings of the court below, and the judgment must be affirmed.
By the Qowrl. —Judgment affirmed.