218 P. 597 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1923
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *267 This is an appeal from an order setting aside a sale of real property in the above-entitled estate.
The sale was made by the administrator with the will annexed under the mandatory directions contained in the will of John P. Backesto, deceased, which provided that within one year after the death of his wife his property should be sold and the proceeds divided among certain heirs. Upon the happening of this event proceedings were instituted to carry out the testator's direction. The sale of the property in question was made to appellant, John Engebretson, April 26, 1922, for the sum of sixty-four thousand dollars. A deposit of six thousand five hundred dollars was made with the bid, leaving a balance of fifty-seven thousand five hundred dollars to be paid upon the approval of the sale and delivery of a deed. Thereafter, on the twenty-eighth day of April, 1922, the administrator filed his return. Upon the day fixed for the hearing thereof it appeared that the sale was legally made and fairly conducted and the same was confirmed. Thereafter a controversy arose between the purchaser and the administrator over the question whether certain taxes should be paid by the administrator out of the proceeds of the sale, or whether the purchaser should accept a conveyance subject to this charge. The parties being unable to settle their differences, the purchaser, appellant herein, filed in the estate a petition praying for *268 leave to deposit the sum of fifty-seven thousand five hundred dollars, the balance of the purchase price, in court, and for an order directing the administrator to deliver his deed and that he be required to pay the taxes when due and payable out of the purchase price and for such other and general relief as might be found just and equitable. To this petition the administrator filed an answer and prayed that the petition be denied and for an order that the sale be set aside. The purchaser filed his objections to this petition and again offered to pay the balance of the purchase price in full, so that the estate might have the use of the same, and asked that the question as to the payment of taxes be reserved for future consideration and determination by the court.
Upon the hearing of these motions the petitions of the purchaser that he be permitted to pay the balance of the purchase price into court and that the administrator deliver his conveyance and pay the taxes were denied, and the petition of the administrator to set aside the order of sale was granted, and a resale of the property was ordered. In setting aside this order the court proceeded upon the theory that the sale was a judicial one and that the purchaser took title to the property with its infirmities and the administrator was not therefore required to give a warranty of title as the rule ofcaveat emptor applied.
Upon the question of taxes, it appears from the record that at the date of the sale there had accrued tax liens upon the property as follows: Taxes due the city of San Diego, which under its freeholders' charter became a lien on January 1, 1922, and would become due and payable on the first Monday of June following; and state and county taxes which became a lien on the first Monday in March, 1922, by virtue of section 3718 of the Political Code, and which would become due and payable on the third Monday in October, 1922.
The main question here presented is whether or not the sale was judicial in character. [1] A sale is not, properly speaking, a judicial one unless it is made upon express order of the court having jurisdiction of the subject matter of the sale, and which it directs to be sold for the purpose of carrying its judgment into effect, or of directing a disposition of its proceeds. (Freeman on Void Judicial Sales, sec. 1; Holleck v. Guy,
[7] Respondent advances the argument that even assuming that the sale was not a judicial one, the court had no jurisdiction to compel performance, and that the purchaser, therefore, was relegated to his relief in a civil action. Pending administration of estates the probate court has full and plenary power to direct the execution of a conveyance upon compliance by a purchaser with the terms of his contract. (Inre Walker,
[8] The further argument is made in support of the contention that the sale was a judicial one, that under the statute an administrator with the will annexed has no power *271
to carry out the imperative mandate to an executor named in the will to sell, for which reason it is claimed the sale must of necessity be a judicial one. In support of this position it is argued that section
We are asked to direct the court below to make certain directions following the reversal of the order vacating the sale. We do not deem it necessary to so direct the court.
The order vacating the sale is reversed. The order denying the appellant's petition for performance of the administrator's agreement is also reversed.
St. Sure, J., and Richards, J., concurred.
A petition by respondent to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on September 24, 1923. *273