10 A.D. 605 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
One Keran O’Brien died intestate in 1880, leaving a widow, Florinda O’Brien, and nine children. One child, by a former marriage, was of age, and the other eight children,-by his wife Florinda,
I am satisfied that Florinda O’Brien, in good faith, believed herself the owner in fee simple absolute of the property; and there is no evidence whatever, or claim of any unfairness in the sale, or that the price was kept down by any misconduct on her part. There are no circumstances disclosed connected with the sale to prejudice her title, except the bare fact of her relation to her minor children at the time of the purchase.
Their father being dead, she was charged by the statute with the duties of guardian m socage until a general guardian should be appointed; and those duties comprehended the duty to “ safely keep * * * the inheritance of his ward.” (2 Birdseye’s R. S. [1st ed.] 1292, § 44; 3 id. 2516, §§ 5, 6, 7.)
It is elementary law that this duty was inconsistent with a purchase upon the foreclosure for her own use .of the interests of her minor children.
. It is claimed in behalf of the children that the sale was absolutely void; that their estate was not divested, but remained in them precisely as though no sale had taken place. It is claimed on the other hand by the synod -that their title was divested by the sale; that
In support of the former proposition section 1679 of the Code of Civil Procedure is cited. This provision of the Code is contained in title 1 of chapter 14, providing for the procedure in actions relating to real estate — among other actions for the foreclosure of mortgages.
It is as follows: “ A commissioner or other officer, making a sale, as prescribed in this title, or a guardian of an infant party to the action, shall not, nor shall any person, for his benefit, directly or indirectly, purchase or be interested in the purchase of any of the property sold; except that a guardian may, where he is lawfully authorized so to do, purchase for the benefit or in behalf of his ward. The violation of this section is a misdemeanor, and a purchase made contrary to this section is void.”
■ If the guardian meant by this section is merely a guardian ad litem in the action, then this case is not within it. Otherwise, it is clearly within it, and I am satisfied that the construction and effect given to similar provisions of law in reference to sales of real estate, by executors or administrators, to pay debts, under direction of the surrogate, must.be given to this. Those provisions were considered in Forces v. Halsey (26 N. Y. 53) and Terwilliger v. Brown (44 id. 237, 241), and it was held that in a case within the prohibition no title passes, but the title remains in the original owner as though the sale had never been made. I cannot find that these cases have ever been overruled or their authority in any manner questioned.
Dodge v. Stevens (94 N. Y. 209) is not within the letter of section 1679 of the Oode of Civil Procedure, because the infant was not a party to the foreclosure at the sale in which the guardian
But, in my opinion, the guardian intended by section 1679 is simply a guardian ad litem in the action in which the sale is had. It will be observed that the statutes under consideration in Forbes v. Halsey and Terwilliger v. Brown regulated the action and defined the duty of a quasi ofiicer of the Surrogate’s Court acting under the control and direction of the surrogate. Section 1679 of the Code seems to me to be intended not to prescribe any general rule for cases of purchase by one standing in a relation of confidence, but purchases by persons who in the particular action occupy the relation of officers of the court. The language of the section is, “A commissioner, or other officer, making a sale, as prescribed in this title, or a guardian of an infant party to the action,” etc.; the connection in which the provision relating to guardians is used seems to indicate only a guardian appointed by the court, to take charge, in the action, of the interests of some infant party thereto, occupying a rank similar to that of the commissioner or referee who makes the sale.
A provision in the Code of Civil Procedure, altering the previously well-settled rule in law and equity, relating to the acts of trustees of any description, seems to be out of place, while the definition and limitation of what a referee or guardian appointed by the court in an action may do is germain. Besides, no reason can be suggested why a general guardian of an infant should have here been forbidden to purchase at a sale in an action to which his ward was a party, while such purchases by trustees of any other description are left to be governed by the established rules of equity.
It results from this that the purchase by Mrs. O’Brien at the sale under the Gianella mortgage is within the rule applied in Dodge v. Stevens (supra), in People v. O. B. of S. B. B. Co. (92 N. Y. 103), and Boerum v. Schenck (41 id. 132).
The legal title of the minor children was divested by the sheriff’s deed and vested in Mrs. O’Brien, subject to their right to invoke
The title acquired by Mrs. O’Brien under the Gianella foreclosure has by her mortgage to the synod, the foreclosure thereof and the purchase by the synod, become vested in it. It is, of course, subject to any equities of the O’Brien children which have not been waived or extinguished, the extent or conditions of which I do not determine.
The complaint seeks no equitable relief. It is framed upon the theory that the sale under the Gianella foreclosure did not divest the plaintiffs title. The conclusion which I have reached upon that question leads to a dismissal of the complaint.