37 S.E. 954 | N.C. | 1901
The plaintiff claims under a deed from D. Wahab, administrator, which on its face purports to be authorized by orders and decrees in a special proceeding, entitled "D. Wahab, Adm'r of H. W. Wahab, against W. H. Wahab and others." It appeared in evidence that the order of sale in said special proceeding and the order confirming the sale by which the deed to plaintiff was directed and the probate of deed to plaintiff, were all made by J. H. Wahab, Clerk of the Superior Court, who was one of the heirs-at-law and distributees of the deceased and a party to the proceeding, that he drew the answer of the guardian ad litem of the infant defendants, that he was brother of the plaintiff in the special proceeding and brother and uncle of the defendants. The relationship is fully set out in the pleadings in said special proceeding.
The Court below properly held that said orders and decrees were void and that the plaintiff could not recover. The Code, sec. 104, subsecs. 1, 2;Gregory v. Ellis,
What may be the remedy of plaintiff, who has paid the purchase money ($216) for the land in question, is not a matter *4 before us. But clearly the plaintiff can not recover the land by virtue of a deed whose probate is a nullity and (5) which was made under decrees made by a party to the action, the disqualification not having been waived in any mode, as required by statute, and some of the parties being incapable of making a waiver by reason of infancy. These defects were not cured by the approval of the final decree by the Judge of the district.
The appellee will, however, be taxed with costs of those parts of transcript and the printing thereof, which are embraced in secs. 2, 3 and 4 of appellant's exceptions, for sending up unnecessary matter, as provided by rules 22 and 31 of this Court. See cases cited in Clark's Code (3 Ed.), p. 918.
The judgment of nonsuit is affirmed.
Affirmed.