39 Ill. 256 | Ill. | 1866
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was a bill in chancery brought by the plaintiffs in error to the March Term, 1863, of the Shelby Circuit Court, to set aside a sale of real estate, made under a decree of the same court, rendered at the May Term, 1842, authorizing the administrator of John B. Smith to sell certain real estate for the payment of debts. The defendants answered, setting up their various titles under the sale, and, on the hearing, the Circuit Court dismissed the bill.
The only objection to the proceedings which goes to the jurisdiction of the court, is based upon the alleged insufficiency of the administrator’s notice. That is in the following form:
“Notice is hereby given to William Smith and Sarah Smith, heirs at law of John B. Smith, deceased, that I will present a petition at the next term of the Shelby Circuit Court, to be holden at the court-house in Shelbyville, on the fourth Monday in the month of May next, to the judge of said court, for the sale of the whole or as much of the real estate of said John B. Smith, deceased, as will be sufficient to satisfy the debts against said estate, at which time and place you and all persons interested are requested to attend, and show cause, if any can, why said real estate should not be sold for the purposes aforesaid.
“A. Thornton for petitioner.
“ WM. BONE,
Adm/r. of John B. Smith, deceased.
“March 15th, 1842.
“ I hereby certify that the above notice to the heirs at law of John B. Smith, deceased, was published six successive weeks prior to the May Term of Shelby Circuit Court, for 1842, in the Shelbyville Herald.
“J. C. DUHCAH, Publisher.”
It is objected to this notice that it does not specify in what county or State the court was to be held at which application was to be made. It does specify “ the .Shelby Circuit Court to be liolden at the court-house in Shelbyville.” The notice was inserted in a newspaper published in Shelby county, and the language of the advertisement was a sufficient designation of the county, and one which no human being who read it could have misunderstood. So also as to the absence from the notice of the name of the State. Ho person who read the notice in a paper published in Shelby county, could have doubted for one moment that “ the Shelby Circuit Court to be holden in the court-house at Shelbyville,” referred to Shelby county in the State of Illinois. A notice with this same alleged defect was held sufficient in Gibson v. Roll, 27 Ill. 92, and in Goudy v. Hall, 36 Ill. 313. Titles of purchasers in good faith should never be overturned upon this species of captious criticism.
It is further objected that the certificate of publication is defective in not stating the first and last days of the publication. The decree of the court, however, recites as follows : “ It appearing to the court that notice, according to law, was given of the pendency of this cause,” and this recital cures the defect of the certificate. This was so held in Reddick v. State Bank, 27 Ill. 145, even on a writ of error. See also Timmerman v. Phelps, id. 496, and Banks v. Banks, 31 id. 162. Although the certificate of the printer may have been insufficient, yet we must presume, from this recital, that the court received other evidence of the date of publication.
This disposes of all objections taken to the jurisdiction of the court, and thereby disposes of the case. Various other objections are made to the proceedings, but it is unnecessary to consider them, for at most they were but errors, and cannot be urged against the title of these defendants. The case of Stow v. Kimball, 28 Ill. 108, wa's twice argued and very fully considered by the court, and the rule is there laid down in the most emphatic language in regard to administrator’s sales, that when the court has once obtained jurisdiction by the notice and petition, then it matters not what errors may intervene, the title of .the purchaser is protected under the decree. The court say: “If the court acted without proof, or even if it were affirmatively shown that there were no debts to be paid out of the proceeds of the real estate, still, we could not, for that reason, treat the decree as void.” The same principle was laid down in the case of Goudy v. Hall, 36 Ill. 313, in which we held that the reversal of a decree authorizing the administrator to sell, would not divest the title of the purchaser.
The case of Lloyd v. Malone, 23 Ill. 43, is cited by the complainants’ counsel as a case in point. But that was a bill in chancery filed by infants to set aside a guardian’s sale, not merely for errors in the proceedings, but on the ground of fraud. The father-in-law of’ the infants, who brought the bill, gave notice at the sale that it would be resisted in behalf of the infants. The property was bought by one of the defendants in the bill for himself and the other defendant, and both were present at the sale and cognizant of the notice then given. The bill was brought to set aside the sale soon after it occurred. The language of the court at the opening of. the opinion, clearly shows in what light it regarded the case. It is as follows : “ The bill charges that the application for the sale of the lands and all the proceedings anterior thereto, by the guardian, were collusive and designed to injure the infants, and to deprive them of their inheritance, and that no necessity existed for converting their land into money for their support and education, and that the guardian was actuated in procuring the order of sale and selling the land, by improper motives to injure them.” At the conclusion the court further say: “ The whole proceedings from first to last seem to be a contrivance to get this land for sinister purposes.” Although the opinion dwells upon those defects in the record which are merely errors, yet it is evident that the .court regarded the whole' proceeding as tainted with fraud, and that the defendants, having received notice at the sale, could not claim to be innocent purchasers, and it is upon this ground that the decision is sustainable and in harmony with the ruling of the court in other cases.
It is urged by the counsel for the plaintiff in error that this proceeding is not collateral. Perhaps it should not be so regarded, so far as relates to the parties to the former bill; but as to the defendants in this proceeding, whose title derived from, the sale is sought to be divested, it is as purely collateral as an action of ejectment.
It is further urged that it does not appear in the record that the administrator made a conveyance to the defendants. The bill proceeds against them as purchasers, and prays that the sale to them be set aside. It contains no allegation that a deed was not made to them, and does not make that a ground for relief. If no conveyance was made, it was unnecessary to come into chancery as against them. The action of ejectment would have furnished an ample remedy, This position is inconsistent with the whole frame and design of the bill. It is also objected that the report of the administrator shows a sale of different lands from those named in the decree. The case of Stow v. Kimball, 28 Ill. 108, already quoted, decides that a report was not necessary to the validity of the sale. The bill proceeds upon the ground that the lands actually sold were those described in the decree.
The decision of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.