19 Or. 198 | Or. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
The issues in this case are too prolix. A large amount of the labor bestowed thereon was unnecessary and served no purpose except to obscure the real points of contention between the parties. In an action to recover the possession of real property under the Code of this State, the plaintiff is required to set forth the nature of his estate in the property, whether in fee, for life, or a term of years, and for whose life and the duration of such term, and that
Counsel for the appellant have urged a number of points herein as error and have cited a great many authorities to sustain them; but it seems to me that the main question in the case to be tried, and which was tried in the circuit court, was whether or not the appellant’s action was barred by the statute of limitations. The respondent’s counsel does not, so far as I can discover, contend that the probate proceedings under which the property was sold at administrator’s sale were strictly in conformity with the statute, although he insists that the sale was made in good faith, and that the funds realized therefrom were honestly applied in the payment of debts existing against the estate of the intestate; and that the irregularities and defects in said proceedings were of such a character as would require the ■ courts, under the curative statutes of 1874 and 1878, to disregard them. The effect of these statutes upon sales of real property by administrators under irregular proceedings, has not been determined by any adjudication of this court which has come to my knowledge; but it seems tome that they have an important bearing upon the decisions regarding the validity of such sales when they are made in good faith for the purpose of paying legal claims against the estate administered upon. No one will contend that
Section 8 of the act of 1878, entitled, “An act to cure defects in deeds heretofore made to real property that are defective in execution or acknowledgment, and to cure defects in judicial sales of real property, and sales of lands by executors and administrators,” provides as follows: “All sales by executors and administrators of their decedents’ real property in this State to purchasers for a valuable consideration which has been paid by such purchasers to such executors or administrators or their successors in good faith, and such sales shall not have been set aside by the county or probate court, but shall have been confirmed or acquiesced in by such county or probate court, shall be sufficient to sustain an executor’s or administrator’s deed to such purchaser for such real property; and in case such deed shall not have been given, shall entitle such purchaser to such deed, and such deed shall be sufficient to such purchaser,” to entitle such purchaser* to “all the title that such decedent had in said real prop-' erty; and all irregularities in obtaining the order of the court for such sale, and all irregularities in making or conducting the same by such executor or administrator, shall be disregarded.” And section 1 of the act of 1874, entitled, “An act for the relief of purchasers of real estate at sales made by administrators or executors,” provides: “When any real estate has been heretofore, or shall be hereafter, sold by any executor or administrator, under or by virtue of any license or order of any county court in this State, and said sale shall have been approved by said county court, and the pur» ■
These acts, according to my view, are wholesome regulations of law, and the heirs to the property sold have no grounds for complaint on account of the enforcement of their provisions. The title of the.heirs to the property is subject to the paramount right of the government to direct its disposition, if necessary, for the purpose of liquidating existing claims against the estate of the decedent. The heirs’ title vests in them by operation of law,but is subject to such right of disposition. If, therefore, the property is sold . under an order of the probate court, by a duly-appointed and qualified executor or administrator, for the purposes mentioned, and a valuable consideration has been paid therefor by the purchaser in good faith, the heirs are not deprived of any vested right, although the conditions upon which the general statute authorized the sale to be made were not strictly complied with. Under the general statute the executor or administrator, in order to obtain a license to sell real property belonging to the estate of the decedent, must file a petition containing certain facts. The probate court must thereupon issue a citation to the heirs to show cause why the property should not be sold to pay claims against the estate, which must be returned with proof that it had been served in the manner prescribed by statute.
In proceedings of that character, a defect in the petition, citation or in the proof of the service of the citation, will,
If the construction of the two acts suggested, which is obviously in accordance with the intention of the legislature, be correct, and the power to provide that a sale by an executor or administrator of the real property of the decedent shall be regarded valid, which under the existing law would have been deemed a nullity, reside in that body, then all the principal exceptions relied on by the appellant’s counsel, aside from those relating to the statute of limitations, may easily be disposed of. That the power to validate a sale in such cases which in legal effect was void is within the province of legislative functions, is fully sustained by Wilkinson v. Leland, supra. Judge Story, who delivered the opinion of the court in that case, at page 658, says: ‘‘The question then arises whether the act of 1792” — referring to an act of the legislature of Rhode Island — “involves any such exercise of power” — to divest the vested rights of property, and transfer them without the assent of the parties. “It is admitted that the title of an heir by descent, in the real estate of his ancestor, and of a devisee in an estate unconditionally devised to him, is, upon the death of the party under whom he claimed, immediately devolved upon him, and he acquires a vested estate. But this, though true in a general sense, still leaves his title encumbered with all the liens which have been created by the party in his life-time, or-by the law at his decease. It is not an unqualified, though it be a vested, interest, and it confers no title, except to what remains after every such lien is discharged. In the present case, the devisee under the will of Jonathan Jenckes, without doubt, took a vested estate in fee in the land in Rhode Island. But it was an estate still subject to all the qualifications and liens which the laws of that State annexed to those lands. It is not sufficient to entitle the heirs of the devisee now to recover, to establish the fact that the estate so vested has been divested; but that it has been divested in
‘ ‘But it is said that this is a retrospective act, which gives validity to a void transaction. Admitting that it does so, still it does not follow that it may not be within the scope of the legislative authority in a government like that of Rhode Island, if it does not divest the settled rights of property. A sale had 'already been made by the execu-
Whether the sale of the property in controversy by the administrator to the said F. T. Dick was made under circumstances that would bring the transaction within the provisions of said two acts, was a question of fact proper to be submitted to the jury; and they may be presumed to have found by their verdict that the sale was made under such circumstances. And the appellant’s counsel do not appear to claim that the proofs in the case were not sufficient to warrant the jury in so finding. Said counsel do, however, claim that the petition for the order to sell and the citation to the heirs were defective; but that, in view of the said curative acts, would not necessarily render the sale void. They, however, contend that the acts do not • cure jurisdictional defects, and cite, among other authorities, the language of Mr. Cooley upon the subject in his work on Const. Dim. p. 457, 5th Ed., where hesays: “A retrospective statute curing defects in legal proceedings
The appellant’s counsel also contend that the circuit court committed error in refusing to give the following instruction: “If you find from the evidence that the defendant entered the premises without title, the fact that defendant has acquired by adverse possession, the title of the tenants in common who were not made parties to this action, does not preclude the plaintiff from recovering the whole of the premises.” Said counsel attempt to sustain their contention that said instruction should have been given, upon the authority of Chipman v. Hastings, 50 Cal. 310, which seems to be in point. The supreme court of California held in that case that the question as to whether the title of the tenants in common, who were not parties, had been defeated by such an adverse possession on the part of the defendant, could be determined only in an action to which they were parties. The view taken by that court must have been that the legal title to the property was not acquired by adverse possession, that such possession would merely operate as a bar to the right of entry of the owner of the fee. Such, however, is not the rule in this State. This court held in Parker v. Metzger, 12 Or. 409, that adverse possession of real estate for the period prescribed by the statute of limitations vested a perfect title in the possessor as against the former holder of the title and all the world, and that he was entitled to all the remedies which were incident to possession under a written title. According to that view the respondent’s tenure in the property was as certain under the proof of an adverse holding during the period prescribed by the statute of limitations as it would have been under an
The point claimed by appellant’s counsel that the act of the legislative assembly of the State, approved October 17, 1878, purporting to be an amendment to sections 4 and 17 of chapter one of the Code of Civil Procedure, was void for the reasons stated in the appellant’s reply, cannot, at this late date, be entertained. Said act had stood upon the statute book for nearly ten years, and beep recognized and acted upon by the courts in a number of cases without being questioned. Under such circumstances it should be presumed to have been adopted in conformity with the requirements of the constitution. If the matter had been brought to the attention of the court soon after the act was passed it would have been proper to have inquired as to whether the bill was read in the respective houses the number of times, and in the manner prescribed by that instrument, and as to whether proposed amendments to it in one of the houses had been regularly concurred in by the other; but, after having been acquiesced in for so great a length of time, it would be highly detrimental to public interest to determine it invalid in consequence of an informality in its enactment, when it is evidently the express will of the legislature. The effect of the act was to change the time for the commencement of an action to recover the'possession of real property from twenty years to ten years, which has always been regarded by the community as a wholesome regulation, and I do not think that it would be either just or politic to decide it a nullity at this late date, even if the journals of the two houses of the legislative assembly do fail to show the facts claimed by appellant’s counsel.
But the act of 1878, in prescribing the period of ten years in which an action shall be brought to recover real property, provides, among other things, that if any person entitled to bring the action be, at the time the cause of action acerued, a married woman, the time of such disability shall not be a part of the time limited for the commencement of the action; but the period within which the action shall be
Another contention of appellant’s counsel is, that the statute does not begin to run in such a case until the administration of the estate has fully terminated. I have no doubt but that the statute does not begin to run while the property is subject to the possession of the administrator for the purposes of being applied to the satisfaction of claims against the estate, as such possession is not inconsistent with the title of the heir.
I am unable to discover any error in the record herein aside from the one suggested. The judgment appealed from should therefore be affirmed except so far as it affects the ninth interest claimed by the appellant in the property as heir at law of P. M. Curry, deceased; but as to •that interest it should be reversed and the appellant have a new trial concerning her right to recover it in view of the law that her claim thereto, if she has any, is only barred by an adverse possession for the period of fifteen years; and such would be the order of the court if it had the legal right to make it. The court, however, is compelled to reverse the judgment in toto, and remand the cause to the circuit court for a new trial in accordance with the principles of this decision. Such will therefore be the order.