7 Ga. 559 | Ga. | 1849
By the Court. —
delivering the opinion.
This was a claim interposed by an heir, to lands in bis possession, advertised to be sold by an administrator, under a judgment of leave to sell, rendered by the Court of Ordinary. The claimant proposed to prove that there were no debts to be paid; that the lands of the ancestor were divided by consent; that the land advertised for sale had fallen, in the division, to the claimant, and that he had been a long time in possession. The Court refused to admit the evidence, and we think correctly. Our proceedings under our Claim Laws, are sui generis, but they are proceedings in a Court of Law. This is a contest between the administrator and one of the heirs ; the former asserting his right to sell, in his trust character, for the purposes of administration ; the latter denying any necessity for such sale. The administrator produces an order of the Court of Ordinary directing the sale. Whatever maybe the rule in Chancery, in just such a case, the rule here is, that the order to sell, being a judgment of a Court of competent jurisdiction, imports, legally, a necessity for the sale, and that that judgment cannot be attacked and set aside, collaterally, by proof, that the Ordinary improperly exercised its powers. By the Act of 1826, the Court of Ordinary are authorized to order the sale of any part, or the whole of the real estate of an intestate, upon the application of an administrator, “ Where it is made fully and plainly to appear that the same will be for the benefit of the heirs and creditors of said estate.” Prince, 248. Jurisdiction over the subject-matter is here expressly conferred. The exercise of that jurisdiction, in any case, is therefore the judgment of a Court of comjjetent jurisdiction.
It is not1 only leave to sell, but it is a judgment of the Court, that such sale will be for the benefit of the heirs and creditors of the estate; because the judgment, by the Statute, cannot be granted until it is made fully and plainly to appear that such sale will be for the benefit of the heirs and creditors. In favor of this judgment, we are to presume that the Court did its duty; that
Now, the general rule, as to judgments, is, that they are binding upon parties and privies, and cannot be impeached by them collaterally. See 1 Kelly, 136. 2 Ib. 275. Ib. 329. And although the claimant was not brought into Court, and made a party by personal service, yet he had notice by implication, and was at liberty to have become a party. The presumption of the law is, that he had his day in Court, and was heard against the judgment ; if it can be set aside, it must be by application to the Court that rendered it, or by application to a Court of Chancery, upon such grounds as may be cognizable in that Court. A similar question has been determined by this Court. Stell, a guardian, applied for and procured an order of the Court of Ordinary, authorizing him, (under the Act of 1829, which authorizes a guardian to invest a portion of his ward’s money in land, if it is thought expedient so to do,) to purchase a certain tract of land, upon certain terms. He made the purchase, and was afterwards dismissed from the guardianship. The ward and her husband, after marriage, filed á bill against him and the vendor of the land, alleging, among other things, the procurement of the aforesaid order by fraud, and prayed a settlement, &c. Upon the final trial, the presiding Judge instructed the Jury, “ That the state of things contemplated by the Act of 1829, did not exist, and that the defendant neither had the right to apply for, nor the Court to grant the order; and that while nothing wrong might have been intended, it was a legal fraud upon the rights of the ward, and should be set aside.” Exception was taken to this charge, and this Court ruled that “ The Law constituted the Court of Ordinary, and not the Judge of the Superior Court, the arbiter, as to whether or not, in March, 1840, a state of circumstances existed, which made it proper for the Court of Ordinary
Let the judgment of the Court below be affirmed.