Statutory ejectment by appellant against appellee to recover lands sold under decree of the probate court for the purpose of paying debts of the insolvent estate of one King, an heir of whom appel
The appellants assert error, mainly, upon two propositions : First, that the petitions for the sale in the probate court were void of jurisdictional averment, in that they only aver, as a compliance with the requirement, to jurisdiction to order the sale, that the personal assets are insufficient to pay the debts, that at an anterior date the estate was judicially declared insolvent; and, second, that the manner of payment of the purchase price rendered the sale void and did not divest the title of the heir. The attack upon the appellee’s title, and the probate court proceeding affording it, being purely collateral, it has been long and well decided that, if jurisdiction attached, errors intervening therein will not avail to defeat rights acquired thereunder. The judicial declaration of insolvency of an estate, of course, concludes, as far as that proceeding may under our statutes, the insufficiency of both the real and personal property to pay the debts of the estate. Regardless of its effect upon the rights of the heir, he not being a party to the proceeding-looking to the declaration of insolvency by the court, section 326 of the Code of 1896 clothes the judicial ascertainment of this financial status with an evidential power to make out a prima facie case for a decree of sale when the sale of the real estate of the estate is sought-by the executor or administrator. In Meadows v. Meadows, 78 Ala. 242, this court treating this statute said: “We think the legislative intent was to substitute the decree of insolvency for proof that there
There is force in the argument of appellants’ solicitors that the issue, upon the hearing of the petition for sale of lands of an insolvent estate, is the then financial condition of the estate, including the insufficiency of the personal assets to satisfy the demands against the estate; but that right, that issue, is not subverted or perverted when we hold on collateral attack, that the averment of the proof requisite prima facie to sustain the petition and warrant the decree awakens the jurisdiction of the court to proceed in the premises; and, for the reason, that the declaration is but proof, prima facie, of the
There is no merit in the suggestion that the petitions were so defective in the description of the lands sold as to render the sale void.- — Doe v. Hardy, 52 Ala. 291; and cases therein cited.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
