80 Mo. App. 557 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
The statute provides that if a judge of probate is interested, has been of counsel or is a material witness in the determination of any cause or proceeding in the administration and settlement of an estate, he shall not sit in the matter when any
We must likewise overrule the assignment of error that under the facts the judgment of the circuit court approving the sale and ordering the appellant to make a deed, was wrong. As a rule a sale of real estate by an executor or administrator for the payment of the debts ought not be approved, unless the terms of the sale have complied with by the purchaser, and a deed ought not to be ordered made until the purchase price has been fully paid. But some discretion should be allowed the courts in such matters. The statutory requisites and formalities in the settlement of estates are for the protection of the heirs and creditors. When the action of the court is such that these interested parties are not prejudiced but benefited, its action ought not to be disturbed upon purely technical grounds. State ex rel. v. Schleiffarth, 9 Mo. App. 431; In re Est. of Hesche v. Schnecko, 73 Mo. App. 612. In the ease at bar it would have been a useless formality to have compelled the Fidelity Company to pay the executor the amount of the bid which the latter would have been in duty