Price v. Springfield Real-Estate Ass'n

101 Mo. 107 | Mo. | 1890

Black, J.

This is an action of ejectment for thirty acres of land near Springfield in Greene county. Plaintiff appealed • from a judgment in favor of the defendant.

It is admitted that Daniel B. Miller died seized of the land in 1839 or 1840. In 1869 and 1870 the heirs of Miller made deeds of quitclaims to John C. Price, and the plaintiff claims under the last will of Price.

The defendant for a record title put in evidence a deed from Joshua Davis, clerk of the county court of Greene county, to Joseph Weaver, dated the fourth of May, 1843, from which it appears Weaver, as administrator of the Miller estate, sold eighty acres of land, of which the land in suit is a part, and he became the purchaser at his own sale ; a sheriff’s deed dated the fourteenth of September, 1855, made by virtue of proceedings duly had in the partition of the real estate of Joseph Weaver, conveying to Joseph Farrier the thirty acres in question ; also other deeds showing a chain of title from Farrier to the defendant. This suit was commenced on the thirteenth of April, 1886, and a further defense is the statute of limitations.

There is no evidence showing, or tending to show, that plaintiff, her testator or the Miller heirs ever had actual possession of the thirty acres, or any part of it. On the other hand it is shown that Farrier began cutting firewood from the land in 1864. Like acts of ownership have been continued by him, and those claiming from and under him, down to the commencement of this suit, though it does not appear that the *115land has ever been cleared or cultivated.- Defendant and those under whom it claims have paid all of the taxes assessed against the property from 1841 to 1883. It is unnecessary to set out with more detail the evidence on the issue of adverse possession; for the instructions given are so inconsistent that it is impossible to tell on what theory the court decided the case, it having been tried by the court without a jury. If the administrator’s deed is a valid conveyance, and must be so declared as a matter of law on this record, then the judgment must be affirmed, without any regard to the instructions.

The deed from the county clerk to Weaver is, as has been said, dated the fourth of May, 1843. It recites a public sale made by Weaver as administrator of the estate of Daniel B. Miller on the eleventh of September, 1841, pursuant to an order of the county court made on the sixth of August, 1841, and that Weaver, being the highest bidder, became the purchaser of the eighty acres at the price of two hundred and eighty dollars. The defendant also put in evidence three orders of the county court to the following effect: One made on August 6, 1841, directing the administrator to sell the eighty acres of land to the highest bidder at the court-house door on a credit of nine months, to pay the debts of the Miller estate; one dated the third of November, 1841, showing that Weaver as administrator exhibited the sale bill for the eighty acres of land sold according to the previous order of the court, and directing that he be charged with the sum of two hundred and eighty dollars, the amount for which the land was sold ; and one dated the thirty-first of May, 1843, approving the sale and directing the clerk to execute a deed to Weaver.

There is no affirmative proof that these are all of the orders made by the court in the matter of this sale ; and it was admitted on the trial that all of the papers filed in the matter of the Miller estate had been lost or destroyed.

*1161. The plaintiff insists that, in order to sustain the administrator’s sale, it devolved upon the defendant to show that the administrator filed a petition for the sale of the real estate, to produce an order of the court directing notice to be given to all parties in interest of the filing of such a p etition, and to show that the administrator caused the property to be appraised. These objections are all based' upon the proposition that the county courts are courts of special and limited jurisdiction, and that all these matters must be shown in support of the administrator’s deed. Early' cases are cited giving some support to the proposition, but the doctrine has long since been exploded. Formerly county courts had, and probate courts now have, exclusive original jurisdiction in matters concerning the administration of estates of deceased persons. It is now well-settled law that the orders and judgments of these courts are entitled to the same favorable presumptions and intendments that are accorded to the judgments of circuit courts. The proceedings of our probate and county courts are no more open to collateral attack than are the proceedings of any other courts. Camden v. Plain, 91 Mo. 117; Rowden v. Brown, 91 Mo. 429, and cases cited. -Here the defendant' put in evidence the deed, order of sale, and the order approving the same. It was not necessary for the defendant, in the first instance, to make any other or further proof. From the deed and those orders it will be presumed that all requisite antecedent steps had been duly and timely taken, until the contrary is made to appear. These observations dispose of all of the objections before named.

2. It is true the administrator became the purchaser at his own sale. He had a right, under the law as it then stood, to purchase at his own sale, whether private or public, by paying not less than three-fourths of the appraised value of the property. For the reasons before stated, it will be presumed that his bid was at least three-fourths of the appraised value.

*1173. The sale was reported to the county court at the November term, 1841, which must have been the next term after the sale, so that in this respect there was a full compliance with the law; but the objection is made that the sale was not approved until the May term, 1843. A complete answer is, that the law did not require the sale to be approved at the term when the report was made. The report having been made at the proper time, it stood as a pending matter until approved or disapproved. The approval at a subsequent date was not even irregular or erroneous, much less void. Besides all this a premature report and approval does not make the sale void, and the report may be filed and sale approved at a term later than the one next after the sale. Sims v. Gray, 66 Mo. 614; Wilkerson v. Allen, 67 Mo. 502; Henry v. McKerlie, 78 Mo. 429 ; McVey v. McVey, 51 Mo. 407.

4. An objection is based upon the fact that Weaver, the administrator, was one of the justices of the county court when the order of sale and of approval was made. The statute declares that no justice of the county court shall sit in the determination of any cause or proceeding in which he is interested ; and, if the majority of the justices shall be interested in any case or proceeding pending before them, the same shall be certified to the circuit' court. R. S. 1835 [3 Ed.] secs. 39, 41, p. 159. Two of the three justices had no interest whatever in this matter. It is not shown that Weaver took any part, as á member of the court, in these particular proceedings, and there is no presumption that he did participate in the disposal of them because he was present at the opening of court on each day. It must be presumed that he obeyed the law and dictates of common honesty. The objection has no merit in it.

5. The statute in force in 1841 provides that all public administrator’s sales shall be made at the courthouse door on some day while the circuit or county court is in session. The deed recites a public sale made *118on the eleventh of September, 1841, but it does not state where the sale was made, nor that either court was in session. The proof shows that these courts were not in session on the eleventh of September, 1841, but it appears a special term of the county court was held on September 18 of that year. Mobley v. Nave, 67 Mo. 546, holds that an administrator’s deed passed no title, because the sale was not made during the session of the probate, circuit or county court; and a like ruling was made in Ainge v. Corby, 70 Mo. 258, but in that case all of the proceedings including the report of the sale were in evidence. We do not regard these cases as controlling this one.

The statute of 1835 made it the duty of the administrator to make a full report of his proceedings, showing the certificate of appraisement, and a copy of the advertisement, and verified by- affidavit. It is the duty of the court to approve or disapprove the report. If disapproved the sale is of no validity. If approved it is valid, and the administrator, or, where he is the purchaser, the clerk, is required to execute a deed “ stating the date of the order of sale and the court by which it was made, and the consideration, and conveying to the purchaser,” etc. “ Such deed shall convey to the purchaser all the right, title and interest which the deceased had,” etc. The object of requiring these sales to be confirmed is that' the court will look through the report, appraisement and advertisment, and see that the administrator has complied with the order of sale and the law. The approval is a judgment and implies a finding that the proceedings of the administrator have been conducted according to the law and order of sale. This court in Tutt v. Boyer, 51 Mo. 425, when speaking of alleged defects in the appraisement and advertisment, said: “The approval of the sale was a final judgment from which an appeal might have been taken and cannot be impeached collaterally. This judgment has the effect of curing such defects.”

*119It is to be further observed that the statute before quoted only required the deed to recite: First. The order of sale ; second, the court by which it was made ; third, the. consideration. It did not require the clerk to state the date of the sale, nor that the sale was made during the session of the county or circuit court. In these respects the statute is materially different from those of 1845 and subsequent revisions. R. S. 1845, sec. 34, p. 88. The clerk, therefore, in stating the date of the sale made a recital which the law did not require him to make.

Now we do not say that the order approving the sale precludes all inquiry as to whether the sale was made during the session of the county or circuit court; but we do say it is, in the absence of the report of sale, better evidence that the sale was made at the proper time and place than any contrary recital in the clerk’s deed. The law not requiring him to state the time and place of the sale, that recital may be disregarded. This sale was made nearly forty-three years before the commencement of this suit. The plaintiff, and those through whom she claims, have never had the actual possession of the thirty acres in question. During that time the persons claiming under the administrator’s deed have paid taxes on the land, and for a period of twenty years before the commencement of this suit have exercised open acts of ownership over it. Under these circumstances it must be presumed that the administrator performed his duties until thé contrary is made to appear. The presumption is no slight one either. The recital in the deed, being an unnecessary one, does not overcome the presumption, even if the law required a recital in the deed of the time and place of the sale, still taking the recital in this deed in connection with the judgment of confirmation and the fact that the county court was in session on the eighteenth of September, which was after the order of sale and before the *120filing of the report thereof, it should be presumed that the recital of the time of the sale is a clerical mistake. Jones v. Manly, 58 Mo. 559. The administrator’s deed is a valid conveyance, and the judgment should be and is affirmed.

All concur.
midpage