73 S.E. 200 | N.C. | 1911
This is a proceeding for the partition of the land described in the pleadings among the heirs of Thomas Patillo. At June Term, 1911, an order was made for the sale of the land, which was made by the commissioner on 7 August, 1911, and D. W. Harrison became the highest bidder and the land was knocked down to him at the price of $1,205, which he paid to the commissioner. No report of sale was made by the commissioner, and the sale was, of course, never confirmed by the court. The commissioner, without any order authorizing him to do so, executed a deed for the land to the bidder, D. W. Harrison.
At October Term, 1911, Carrie Burgin, Hattie Moore, Rose Bradley, Delia Davidson, and Ida Mims made a motion before the court to set aside the sale because, while their names appeared in the list of plaintiffs, they had not authorized counsel for the other plaintiffs, or any one else, to make them parties, and that they were thus made parties without their knowledge or consent, and further, that they are opposed to a sale of the land and desire an actual partition thereof.
Judge Lane found as facts at the hearing of the motion, that (94) the land brought its full value at the sale; that three of the movers had notice of the suit after it was commenced and made no objection thereto; that one of them at the sale expressed her willingness to have the land sold, but that Carrie Burgin did not know of the proceeding and, therefore, had given no authority to any one to make her a party; nor had she been notified what had been done. He further found that a sale of the land was necessary for a fair division of the same. He thereupon denied the motion of all the parties, confirmed the sale, and adjudged D. W. Harrison to be the owner of all the undivided interests in said land except that owned by Carrie Burgin, and, further, that they were tenants in common, Harrison owning all the undivided interests *78
except the one belonging to Carrie Burgin. The motioners excepted and appealed.
This case proceeded very irregularly in the court below from the beginning to the end of it. The court evidently found as a fact that the motioners had not authorized the proceeding to be brought, and that all except Carrie Burgin were bound by the orders and degrees therein, because they happened to know of it, one of them having shown a willingness at the sale that the land should be sold. It would have been better if his Honor had distinctly found whether or not they had authorized themselves to be made parties, but without any such specific finding, we think it a fair inference, from the other findings, that he concluded, as matter of fact, that no such authority had been given. We do not think, therefore, that they were, in law, parties to the proceeding. A mere knowledge of the proceedings, in the absence of authority given to make them parties, would not be sufficient to bind them, nor did a mere expression of willingness that the land might be sold have that effect as to Ida Mims. Before they could be estopped by conduct, they must have done something which caused the other parties or the purchaser to act in some way which will prejudice them if they are (95) not held bound by what has been done in the proceedings, and no such result has followed. Boddie v. Bond,
But there is another more serious question in the case. The court, if it had the power to confirm the sale and further adjudge, as it did, without first bringing in all necessary parties, has in legal effect partitioned only a fractional interest in the land, instead of the whole thereof. It is true, Laws 1887, ch. 214, sec. 1 (Revisal, sec. 2506), provides that in all proceedings for partition actual division may be made of a part of the land and a sale of the remainder, or a part only of any land held by the tenants in common may be partitioned and the remainder held in common, but this provision does not sustain the judgment rendered below upon the motion to set aside the order of sale. The court's order did not provide for a sale of a part and actual division of the remainder, or that a part only be partitioned and the remainder held in common, but it simply ordered the sale to stand as to a fractional interest, an undivided interest, less than the whole, and the remainder to be held, not in common, as the statute provides, but in severalty by Carrie Burgin. But there is direct authority upon the subject. In Brooks v. Austin, *79
There is no innocent purchaser in this case who can be affected by setting aside the decree. Harrison is no such a purchaser — he is not a purchaser at all, but a mere "preferred proposer," as he is styled.Miller v. Feezor,
In the last cited case it is said: "The only other question which we need consider, that is, as to the validity of the deed of the executor and its sufficiency to pass the title, without any confirmation of the sale by the court, is equally well settled. This Court, and all courts, we believe, having jurisdiction to pass upon judicial proceedings for the sale of land, have uniformly held that it is necessary that the sale be reported to the court, and that it be confirmed before the commissioner or other person appointed by the court to make the sale can have any power to make title to the purchaser. The commissioner is invested with a naked power, which must be exercised under the supervision and control of the court, and he has no authority to act save that which he derives from the court under its order or judgment. The bidder at a judicial sale, on the other hand, acquires no right before the sale is reported by the officer and the sale is confirmed by the acceptance of his bid. Until then, the bargain with him is not complete and he acquires no title of any kind to the land. He is regarded as a mere preferred proposer until he has been accepted by the court as the purchaser, and every bidder is presumed to know, because he should know, that his bid is made subject to the condition of its acceptance or rejection by the *80
court. A formal direction to make title is not always necessary to confer upon the commissioner the power to convey the land to the purchaser by deed, but a confirmation of the sale cannot be dispensed with in any case, unless perhaps in some way it has been waived. It is a condition precedent to the exercise of the right to convey the title. This principle has been settled by numerous authorities. Bost ex parte,
We also held that the deed of the commissioner without confirmation, being unauthorized, was void. Revisal, secs. 2512, 2513. Harrison is to be treated, therefore, as a mere proposer, whose bid was awaiting acceptance by the court, and was subject to its rejection. But if the sale had been confirmed, it would not have bound Carrie Burgin, who was not a party to the proceeding (Henderson v. Wallace,
The parties took the proper course to set aside the decree by a *81
motion in the cause, as they were parties nominally, though not (98) so in fact. Doyle v. Brown,
It is suggested that this is a consent decree. But parties to a suit cannot by consent impair the rights of those in interest, who are not made parties, and the decree directly affects their rights, though they were not heard. The whole of the land was partitioned, and the judgment, therefore, operates upon every interest in it.
The judgment will be set aside, as also the order of sale, and deed of the commissioner, the latter returning the purchase money to D. W. Harrison, and the case may then proceed by making all necessary parties, and in other respects as the parties may be advised.
Error. (99)