55 Ala. 525 | Ala. | 1876
This case is not of intrinsic difficulty, but its consideration is embarrassed by inappropriate and, in some respects, insufficient pleading, and the introduction of much irrelevant matter, tending to obscure the questions really at issue. A demurrer to the bill was interposed, assigning ten different causes, several of whieh rest upon the hypothesis, that the bill is filed under the statute (Bevised Code, § 2274)'for the correction of errors occurring in the final settlement of an administration made in the court of probate. Yet such is not the purpose of the bill, and it contains no averment as to the existence of such settlement, or of any error therein. In this respect, the demurrer is founded on matter introduced by the answer, and not on matter apparent on the face of the bill. Several of the other grounds are not assigned with the particularity which the statute requires, and, for that reason, cannot be entertained. A plea is interposed, averring that the appellant had made a final settlement of his administration in the court of probate, and that more than two years after such settlement, and after the termination of the disability of infancy, under which the complainants labored at the time of the settlement, had elapsed before the filing of the bill. The plea is founded in a misconception of the purposes of the bill, of the rights which the complainants assert, and of the character of relief to which they may be entitled. It is not sought to correct any error
The appellant, having reported to the court of probate that he was the purchaser of the lands, at the sale made by him under the decree of the court, and on the report obtained confirmation of the sale, and procured a conveyance to himself as such purchaser, under the decree of the court, cannot now be permitted to deny the fact, and evade the responsibilities resulting from it. Nor was he, at the time he was substituted as purchaser, capable of making a purchase, which would have been indefeasible against the cestuis que trust, and_ which a court of equity would not regard as clothed with a trust for them. In many respects, his vendee was merely a bidder; the sale was inchoate, and its completion dependent on the confirmation of the court of probate. It was his duty to report the sale for confirmation ; and if the price did not approximate, or was greatly disproportionate to the value of the lands, to resist confirmation, and insist on a re-sale. As a purchaser from the bidder, his interest was confirmation, though the price may have been disproportionate to the value of the lands; and the greater the disproportion, the greater his individual gain. Duty as trustee, and interest as purchaser, were directly in conflict, and the purchase was within the spirit, policy, and reason of the principle, and the mischiefs against which it is directed. It may be the facts will not justify the suggestion of actual or intentional fraud, and that the sale was fair, for a full price, and confirmation would have been the duty of the court of probate. As was said by Peabsos, J., in Brothers v. Brothers, 7 Ired. Eq. 156, the court relieves against such purchases, “ not because there is, but that there may not be fraud.” The principle is not remedial, but preventive of wrong; and no inquiry into the facts of a particular transaction is made. If it falls within a general principle, whether any injury has resulted to those having beneficial interests, is not material. They have a clear legal right to avoid the sale, or to treat it as made for their benefit, and claim whatever of profit may have been derived from it by the trustee.
It is no longer a question whether a court of equity obeys the statute of limitations, or adopts it by analogy. The statute expressly declares, that the limitation of suits at law shall apply to suits in chancery. — Revised Code, § 3381. If the right now asserted was legal, and the remedy pursued in
Reaching the conclusion that two of the complainants are not entitled to relief, and this excluding relief to the other complainant, under the bill as now framed, it is unnecessary to consider other questions which have been presented. íf they arise in the further prosecution of the suit, it will probably be under different circumstances.
The decree of the chancellor must be reversed, and the cause remanded.