149 N.E. 808 | Ill. | 1925
The circuit court of Mercer county sustained a demurrer to a bill filed by some of the heirs of William O'Hearn, deceased, against the other heirs, to set aside an administratrix's deed of eighty acres of land which O'Hearn owned in his lifetime, and other deeds, and to partition the land. The complainants elected to stand by their bill, it was dismissed for want of equity, and they have appealed.
The bill showed that William O'Hearn died on October 6, 1898, owning the east half of the southeast quarter of section 4, town 13, north, range 4, west of the fourth principal meridian, in Mercer county, leaving his widow, Hannah, surviving him, and ten children, the complainants and defendants, as his heirs. His widow, Hannah, was appointed *246 administratrix of his estate, which she settled and closed so far as the personal property and debts were concerned. It was further alleged that the administratrix pretended to sell the real estate on November 8, 1902, to John O'Hearn for a consideration of $3250 but that no part of the consideration was ever paid; that the sale was approved by the county court and a deed made to the purchaser on November 29, 1902, and on the same day the administratrix executed a deed conveying the land to John and it was filed for record. On the same day John and his wife executed a warranty deed of the same land for the pretended consideration of $3250 to Hannah in her individual capacity, which was also filed for record on the same day. It was further alleged that on the same day an agreement was entered into between Hannah and John whereby Hannah agreed, for the sum of $3250, that upon her death John should have the right to purchase the real estate for the sum of $3250, and she also executed a deed to John, to be delivered at her death upon the payment of $3250 to her heirs within thirty days, less the mortgage upon the premises. This agreement was not filed for record until January 17, 1913. The deed to John mentioned in that agreement was filed for record April 17, 1922, after the death of Hannah, but the $3250 was not paid to the heirs of Hannah within thirty days after her death. It is alleged the Citizens' State Bank of Keithsburg, Illinois, claims to have some interest in the real estate by way of mortgage or otherwise, the nature and extent of which is unknown to the complainants. The bill prays that the deeds of Hannah O'Hearn, as administratrix and individually, to John O'Hearn be set aside and that the land be declared to be the property of the heirs of William O'Hearn; that partition may be made, and that the complainants may have such other and further relief as equity may require.
The bill alleges a colorable sale and deed by the administratrix for which no consideration was paid and an immediate *247
conveyance by the purchaser to the administratrix. The law forbids such a transaction. An administrator may not purchase, directly or through the intervention of another, property belonging to the estate of which he is administrator, at his own sale as such administrator, though made at public auction under a judicial decree for full value and with honest intentions. Such a transaction the law deems fraudulent, for the reason that the interests of the buyer and seller in a contract of sale are opposed, that the administrator acts in a fiduciary relation in making the sale, and that he ought not to be exposed to this conflict of interest in selling as trustee for the estate and buying for himself. The rule is inflexible, and in many cases the right of heirs by a bill in equity to have a sale by an administrator set aside where the administrator himself has been the purchaser has been sustained. (Miles v. Wheeler,
The defendants set up laches appearing from the allegations of the bill as one ground of demurrer. The objection of laches
may be made by demurrer when it appears on the face of the bill. (Elting v. First Nat. Bank, supra; Foss v. People's GasLight Co.
The bill sets out a clear right in the complainants to have the sale set aside on equitable terms. No circumstance having, of itself, a tendency to show laches appears except the lapse of time, and that, alone, is not sufficient. It may be that complainants have been guilty of laches so as to bar their right to maintain the bill, but it does not appear on the face of the bill, and the rule is that the purchase being primafacie a fraud and void, it devolves on the defendant claiming under it to show whatever he claims takes it out of the rule. (Miles v. Wheeler, supra.) The bill shows a case where the complainants were originally entitled to the *250 relief asked. It does not show laches to bar that relief. It was therefore sufficient to require an answer of defendants.
It was error to sustain the demurrer, and the decree is therefore reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to overrule the demurrer.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.