29 Haw. 284 | Haw. | 1926
This is an action of ejectment. The land sued for was the property of one Peter Rodrigues who died intestate on September 7, 1910, leaving surviving him as his heirs at law his three minor children, the present plaintiffs. The widow was appointed administratrix of his estate on October 25, 1910, and as early as twenty days thereafter filed a petition representing to the judge of the court of probate that there were debts of the decedent, that the personalty was insufficient to pay the debts and that it was necessary to sell the real estate in order to satisfy the claims of the creditors. On the same day or the day immediately following the filing of the petition the probate court signed an order authorizing the sale and the land was sold and conveyed by the administratrix, at private *285 sale, to one Alice Tullett, under whom the present defendants claim as purchasers through mesne conveyances. The plaintiffs claim the land as the heirs at law of the decedent. Notice of the filing or the pendency of the petition of the administratrix for leave to sell the land was not given to the heirs.
The facts in the case were presented to the trial court by stipulation and are entirely undisputed. The sole issue before us is one of law. The claim of the plaintiffs is that in this Territory the title to the real estate of a decedent passes to the heirs immediately upon his death and does not pass to the administrator, that a petition by an administrator for leave to sell the real estate to pay debts is an adversary proceeding, that a sale cannot be validly made of the property of the heirs without notice to them and that therefore the sale in the present instance, being without notice to the heirs, was void and of no effect. The contention of the defendants, on the other hand, is that under the law of Hawaii in force at the date of the sale the absence of notice to the heirs did not render the sale void.
The fact that the petition was filed by the administratrix twenty days after her appointment and before any publication of notice to creditors and the further fact that the sale was not had at public auction, while mentioned by the plaintiffs in their brief and in their oral argument, are not relied upon as grounds of recovery in this action, these being admitted irregularities of a nature that cannot be reached upon a collateral attack such as the present.
The statute in force at the time of the sale, L. 1876, c. 57, Sec. 1, R.L. 1905, Sec. 1855, was as follows: "The probate courts of this Territory have had from the time of their establishment, and now have, and hereafter shall continue to have jurisdiction to order and decree the sale *286 of any real estate of deceased persons for the purpose of paying their debts, whensoever the personal estate of such deceased persons shall prove to be insufficient for the purpose." At that time the law did not require notice of the petition or the sale to be given to the heirs of the decedent. No mention whatever was made in the statute of any such notice. In 1911 this statute was amended so as to require notice to the heirs but the sale in question was had in November, 1910, prior to the passage of the amendatory statute, and the latter therefore cannot be regarded as having any application to this case.
In so far as jurisdictional matters are concerned, the sale satisfied all the requirements of the statute. The probate court found that there were debts due by the estate of the decedent and that the personal estate was insufficient to pay them and the administratrix petitioned for the sale of the real estate in order to pay the debts. In language entirely unambiguous the probate courts were by the statute given power to decree under those circumstances the sale of real estate of the decedent in order to pay the debts. It is inexact to say that in this jurisdiction, under all circumstances and without qualification, the real estate of a decedent passes immediately upon his death to his heirs and devisees. There is the qualification to the general rule on the subject that if the decedent owed debts at the time of his death and if his personal estate was insufficient for the purpose of satisfying those debts the probate courts had the authority to order the sale of the real estate or as much thereof as might be necessary to satisfy the debts. In such a case the purchaser derives his title, not from the heirs but from the administrator. There can be no doubt of the power of the state to designate the persons to whom the property of a decedent shall go upon his death. Through the law in force in this particular instance at the time of *287 the death of the decedent the state designated that the property should go to the heirs at law but only after justice had been done to the creditors by applying as much of the property as might be necessary to the payment of the debts of the former owner. For these reasons notice to the heirs or devisees, while it may properly be required by the legislature, is not indispensable. If it is not required by the statute the law is nevertheless valid as is a sale in conformity with the law. While there are authorities to the contrary, these principles appear to have been so clearly adopted and established by the Supreme Court of the United States that our duty cannot be in doubt. InGrignon's Lessee v. Astor, 2 How. 319, 338, 339, 340, 342, 343, the question of the validity of such a sale was elaborately considered by the court. The Michigan statute under consideration in that case provided for notice to the heirs and the Supreme Court held that the provision was directory only and that the failure to give notice did not detract from the jurisdiction of the Michigan court. The Supreme Court held that under the circumstances the proceeding was in rem, that the heirs were not adversary parties and that notice to them was not essential. "On a proceeding to sell the real estate of an indebted intestate, there are no adversary parties, the proceeding is inrem, the administrator represents the land. * * * They are analogous to proceedings in the admiralty where the only question of jurisdiction is the power of the court over the thing, the subject-matter before them, without regard to the persons who may have an interest in it; all the world are parties. In the Orphans' Court, and all courts who have power to sell the estates of intestates, their action operates on the estate, not on the heirs of the intestate; a purchaser claims not their title, but one paramount. * * * The estate passes to him by operation of law. * * * The sale is a *288 proceeding in rem, to which all claiming under the intestate are parties, * * * which directs the title of the deceased. * * *
"No other requisites to the jurisdiction of the county court are prescribed than the death of Grignon, the insufficiency of his personal estate to pay his debts, and a representation thereof to the county court where he dwelt, or his real estate was situate, making these facts appear to the court. Their decision was the exercise of jurisdiction, which was conferred by the representation; for whenever that was before the court, they must hear and determine whether it was true or not; it was a subject on which there might be judicial action. * * *
"The granting the license to sell is an adjudication upon all the facts necessary to give jurisdiction, and whether they existed or not is wholly immaterial, if no appeal is taken. * * * A purchaser under it is not bound to look beyond the decree; if there is error in it, of the most palpable kind, if the court, which rendered it, have, in the exercise of jurisdiction, disregarded, misconstrued or disobeyed the plain provisions of the law which gave them the power to hear and determine the case before them, the title of a purchaser is as much protected as if the adjudication would stand the test of a writ of error." Quoting from an earlier decision of its own, the court said: "The purchaser is not bound to look further back than the order of the court. He is not to see whether the court were mistaken in the facts of debts and children. The decree of an orphans' court in a case within its jurisdiction is reversible only on appeal, and not collaterally in another suit. A title under a license to the administrator to sell real estate `is good against the heirs of the intestate, although the license was granted upon the certificate of the judge of probate, not warranted by the circumstance of the case.'" The court continued: "We do *289 not deem it necessary, now or hereafter, to retrace the reasons or the authorities on which the decisions of this court in that, or the cases which preceded it, rested; they are founded on the oldest and most sacred principles of the common law. Time has consecrated them; the courts of the States have followed, and this court has never departed from them. They are rules of property, on which the repose of the country depends; titles acquired under the proceedings of courts of competent jurisdiction must be deemed inviolable in collateral action, or none can know what is his own; and there are no judicial sales around which greater sanctity ought to be placed, than those made of the estates of decedents, by order of those courts to whom the laws of the States confide full jurisdiction over the subjects." The same principles were reaffirmed in Beauregard v. NewOrleans, 18 How. 497, 503; in Florentine v. Barton, 2 Wall. 210, 216; and in Comstock v. Crawford, 3 Wall. 396, 404, 405. To the same effect are McPherson v. Cunliff, 11 S. R. (Pa.) 422, 432, which was cited as authority in the Grignon case;Howell v. Hughes, 53 So. (Ala.) 105, 107; and Apel v.Kelsey, 2 S.W. (Ark.) 102, 103.
Certain Hawaiian cases are referred to by the plaintiffs as authorities to the contrary. The first of them is In re Estateof Poholowai,
Another is Mikalemi v. Luau,
In the case entitled In re Estate of Brash,
In Estate of D.H. Davis,
In Estate of Kaiena,
In Estate of Kamaipiialii,
The judgment appealed from, in favor of the defendants, is affirmed.