137 N.C. 535 | N.C. | 1905
This case was before ns at Spring Term, 1904, when we ordered a new trial. It is reported in 134 N. C., 486, where the facts are fully stated by Justice Montgomery. We are now asked to rehear the case, and to review and reverse the decision we then made. A brief recital of the leading facts will make plain our reason for not doing so. The plaintiffs brought a suit in 1888 against Estes and others and alleged in their complaint that their grandfather, John A. Millsaps, had devised to their father, W. R. Mill-saps, the land in controversy for and during his natural life, with a restriction annexed to the gift that he should not sell and convey the same, and at his death to his legitimate children, the plaintiffs, and that their father sold and conveyed the land to the defendants in this suit, who entered while the life-estate was still subsisting and committed waste upon the land. Their prayer was for a forfeiture of the life-estate and for damages for the waste committed and for a cancellation of the deeds made by the life tenant. The material allegations were denied by the defendants. Plaintiffs were all infants at the time the suit was commenced and when the judgment therein was rendered, and there whs no appoint
This action is brought to set aside that judgment and the award for the reasons stated in the former opinion, some of which were, that the attorneys had no power or authority to consent to any such arbitration and the Court had no power to enter a judgment by consent thereon, and further that an arbitration by infants or their next friend or attorneys if properly appointed, is voidable if not void. At the former hearing, this Court held that the arbitration and proceedings based thereon were void and could not be set up as an estop-pel or as res judicata so as to conclude the infants. Counsel for the petitioners now argue that this was error, as the submission, the arbitration and the award, at most were only voidable and that the infants cannot avail themselves of the defect and disown the act of the attorneys and disaffirm the award, because a judgment of the Court has supervened, and as some at least of the defendants purchased for value upon the faith of that judgment, without notice of any illegality, they are protected under the general principle applicable to persons who buy at judicial sales and who are strangers to the suit in which the sale was ordered.
We find that the authorities are not agreed as to whether an infant’s submission to arbitration is void or merely voidable. Some courts, which are entitled to the greatest respect, have held that it is utterly void, while others of equal authority have held that it is only voidable. In this conflict of opinion, we are inclined to concur with those courts and the text writers who maintain the proposition that such submissions are voidable merely, as we are unable to see why the case should be taken out of the general rule as to the con
Nor has a guardian ad litem or next friend the power to submit for the infant, even though the submission be a rule of Court. “He cannot change the tribunal or the principles of decision.” Morse on Arbitration, 25; Fort v. Battle, 13 Sm. & M., 133; Hannum v. Wallace, 9 Humph., 129. But it can make no practical difference in this case whether the award and judgment are void or voidable, as the infants in their complaints have alleged that the award was made and the judgment was rendered in a suit which was collusive and fraudulent and therefore that they are void. This would seem to be a sufficient disaffirmance of them, and, indeed, the language is quite positive and unequivocal in meaning. If they are to be set aside and disregarded, what difference can it make if- it be done because they are void or voidable ?
There is a more serious question to be considered and one the solution of which may be still more fatal to the award. The original suit was brought to have the life-estate declared forfeited for waste, for damages for the Avaste committed and for the cancellation of the deeds of the defendants. The arbitration reverses the object and the purpose of the suit and converts it into a proceeding to validate the deeds and
The agreement, if there was any with the next friend of the infants, was one-sided in its operation and unequal in its effect. It did not require any arbitration or even consideration of the plaintiffs’ rights,-but only an appraisement of property and a statement of the payments made by the defendants, not to plaintiffs but to their father, in order that the defendants might, by the payment of the balance, or the difference in the amounts, acquire a valid title to the plaintiffs’ land. If we can properly call such a proceeding an arbitration, it is not such a one as a court of equity should enforce or allow to stand in the way of the plaintiff’s recovery. Indeed, we doubt if the Court had the necessary jurisdiction, even in equity, to proceed thus to dispose of an infant’s land, although it may have had the consent of the parties. It unquestionably has a general jurisdiction over the estate of an infant and may sell his property, if it deems it for his interest and advantage to do so (Williams v. Harrington, 33 N. C., 616), but not dispose of it in the manner adopted, or for the purposes intended in the former suit. Troy v. Troy, 45 N. C., 85. There must be some attempt at least by the next friend to protect the rights of the infant. In this case, it appears that one of the parties gets an interest in the land without paying anything whatever to the infants and the others acquire their interests at a most inconsiderable sum. In the language of Ruffin, J., speaking for the Court: “It would be a plain violation of right to leave the
The fact that judgment Avas entered upon the aAvard according to the agreement in the submission does not under the circumstances of this case impart validity to it. The judgment Avas by consent and is as open to attack as the submission and award.
Without discussing the matter more fully, Ave think there was eAÚdence tending to establish the plaintiff’s contention, which should have been considered by the jury upon each of the issues submitted.
The plea that they are purchasers for value and without notice cannot avail the defendants. It is freely admitted to be the general rule, as argued by the defendants’ counsel, that innocent purchasers or those Avho have purchased at a judicial sale without notice of any irregularity in the proceedings and judgment, under which the salo was made, will be protected when it appears that the Court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter of the proceedings and that the judgment on its face authorized the sale. This is but another Avay of stating the general principle that the judgment or decree of a court, haAdng general jurisdiction over a subject-matter, subsisting unreversed, must be respected, .and sustains all things done under it, notwithstanding any irregularity in the course of the proceedings or error in the decision. Williams v. Harrington, supra. Such a judgment will therefore sustain the title of a purchaser at a sale made under it, if he had no notice of the alleged defect in the proceedings. Sutton v. Schonwald, 86 N. C., 198; England v. Garner, 90 N. C., 197. But in our case the irregularities and defects are of suck a nature and are so apparent upon the face of the record in the former suit, that the defendants in that suit and those who
But while the plaintiffs may be able to avoid the judgment and recover their property, they must observe the maxim that he who asks equity must do equity. If they insist upon their disability and the defect in the proceedings for the purpose of invalidating the title of the defendants, they must, when properly called upon to do so, restore any money they have received under the judgment of the Court, or, if the money has been invested in land or other property, they must surrender the latter. Neither an infant nor a married woman will be permitted to repudiate a transaction upon the ground of a want of capacity, or for other sufficient cause, and at the same time retain and enjoy any benefit derived from it. But the receipt of money or anything else of value by the persons under disability during the course of the transaction does not take away the right
This brings us to tbe conclusion that there was no error in our former decision, though somewhat different reasons may have been given for that decision than those which are now assigned.
Petition Dismissed.