delivered the opinion of the court:
Mаrtha Sheahan, the defendant in error, filed her bill in the circuit court of Boone county against John Joseph Madigan, Daniel Hogan in his own right and as executor of the will of Catherine Hogan, deceased, the plaintiffs in error, and others, praying the court to set aside an administrator’s deed executed to Catherine Hоgan on January 27, 1892, by virtue of a decree of the county court of that county, and for partition of the premises described in the deed between herself and Daniel Hogan. Elizabeth L. Stires, a mortgagee, who was made a defendant, filed an answer setting up her rights and filed a cross-bill for the foreclosure of her mortgagе. The defendants to the cross-bill were defaulted, and the defendants to the original bill, except John Joseph Madigan, Daniel Hogan and Elizabeth L. Stires, were defaulted. The complainant in the original bill did not file any replication to the answers, and on her motion the cause was set for hearing on the bill and answers and thе cross-bill taken as confessed. The chancellor granted the relief prayed for .by the original bill and entered a decree setting aside the deed and ordering partition of the premises between the complainant, Martha Sheahan, and the defendant Daniel Hogan, subject to the mortgage indebtedness and a balance due to Catherine Hogan, deceased, on her widow’s award, and subject to debts and unpaid claims against the estate of Thomas Hogan, deceased. The decree also foreclosed the mortgage as prayed in the cross-bill, and provided that unless the amount due should be paid within ninety days the premises should be sold to satisfy the mortgage debt. The plaintiffs in error sued out a writ of error from this court and have assigned for error the findings and decree entered on the original -bill.
The facts are to be ascertained from the averments of the bill so far as admitted by the answers to be true, from which the following facts аppear: Thomas Hogan was the owner of 160 acres of land in Boone county, which was occupied as his homestead. He died intestate on January 17, 1889, leaving Catherine Hogan, his widow, Martha Hogan (now Martha .Sheahan, the complainant,) and Daniel Hogan, one of the defendants, then fifteen and thirteen yeаrs of age, respectively, children of his marriage with Catherine Hogan, and three children of a former marriage, his only heirs-at-law. Catherine Hogan had also been previously married and had four children of her first marriage,—John Joseph Madigan, (one of the defendants,) Catherine Madigan, Jeremiah Madigan and Frank Madigan. On March 13, 1889, letters of administration were issued by the county court of Boone county to Catherine Hogan, and she qualified and filed an inventory of the property of the estate. The personal property was appraised at $997*85 and she was allowed a widow’s award of $950. Two mares appraised at $101 were mortgaged and taken under the mortgage, so that they were lost to the estate, and she took the remainder of the personal property at the appraised value of $896.85 to apply on her award, leaving a balance of $53.15 due her. Claims were allowed against the estate, and on August 22, 1891, she filed her final report showing the unpaid claims against the estate and resigned as administratrix. Her report was approved by the court and she was discharged, and William Knapp was appointed administrator de bonis non and qualified as such. He filed an inventory fixing the value of the land at $7200, and stated that the chattel property had been administered and taken by the widow upon her award, leaving a balance due. He also filed a petition for leave to sell the real estate to pay debts, containing everything necessary to give the court jurisdiction. There was a mortgage on the premises, and the mortgagee, Nathaniel Brown, was made a defendant, together with Catherine Hogan, the widow, Martha Hogan, (now Martha Sheahan, the complainant,) and the other heirs-at-law. They were all served with process in the cause and were all adults except the defendant Daniel Hogan, for whom the court appointed a guardian ad litem, and the guardian filed a formal answer. The mortgagee filed his written consent that the lands might be sold dis-incumbered from the mortgage, and Catherine Hogan, the widow, consented, in writing, to a sale of the premises free and clear from all dower and homestead estates and to take the value thereof in money. The mortgage was for purchase money and was .executed by Thomas Hogan and Catherine Hogan, and her homestead and dower rights were in the excess, if any, above the mortgage debt. The administrator gave a bond in accordance with the statute, which was approved by the county court and a decree was entered authorizing him tо sell the premises. On January 16, 1892, the administrator, after giving notice of the sale, sold the premises at public auction to Catherine Hogan, the widow, for $6071.01, which was the highest and best bid made at the sale. The sale was made free and clear of the lien of the mortgage to which the homestead and dower interests were subject and free and clear of the homestead and dower interests in the excess. The amount of the bid was the exact amount due on the mortgage. The administrator reported the sale to the county court and stated that the costs of the administration of the estate and the costs of the sale had been paid by Catherine Hogan. The county court approved the sale and ordered the administrator to execute a deed, which he did on January 27, 1892. The deed was recorded on January 29, 1892, and Catherine Hogan remained in possession of the premises until her death, claiming them as her own. On the same day that the deed wаs executed Catherine Hogan borrowed from Elizabeth L. Stires, the complainant in the cross-bill, $5880, and with that money and funds of her own she paid the amount of the bid to the administrator. The farm at the time of the sale was worth $7000,—something less than the amount of the homestead exemption above the mortgage. The mortgage to Elizаbeth L. Stires was renewed on January 27, 1897, and it had all been paid by Catherine Hogan with the exception of a balance of $650.50. The final report of the administrator was filed on June 1, 1892, and he was discharged, showing the estate insolvent. Catherine Hogan died on January 29, 1915, leaving a last will and testament, by which she made various bequests, including one of $1000 to the complainant, Martha Sheahan, and devised the rest of her property to her sons, John Joseph Madigan and Daniel Hogan, and appointed Daniel Hogan executor. Other heirs of Thomas Hogan quit-claimed their interests to Martha Sheahan.
The substantial claims in support of the decreе, as stated by counsel, are, that the administrator’s deed to the widow was a nullity for want of jurisdiction in the county court, or if the deed was only voidable and operated to convey title, the title which was conveyed inured to the benefit of the heirs of Thomas Hogan and was held by Catherine Hogan in trust for herself and them. In support of the assignment of errors counsel contend that the proceeding by which the real estate was sold, and the sale and deed, were valid; that Catherine Hogan had title by the statutes of limitation; that complainant was guilty of laches barring her right to relief, and that there was no trust involved.
Counsel on each side have furnished the court with exceedingly comprehensive briefs and arguments covering every question which they deem material in the case and manifesting research and learning, but it will not be necessary to give attention to all of them in an opinion disposing of the case. The suit was a collateral attack upon the judgment of the'county court, and the question which lies at the foundation is whether the decree, upon the facts alleged, was subject to collateral attack.
A judgment rendered by a court having no jurisdiction to hear and determine the case is an absolute nullity and may be attacked at any time and in any proceeding. (Demilly v. Grosrenaud,
The county court had jurisdiction of the persons in the proceeding to sell the real estate, and the jurisdiction of the complainant, who was аn adult, was obtained by personal service upon her. That jurisdiction is not questioned, but the argument of counsel to sustain the collateral attack is, that the sale was void because the land did not sell for more than $1000 above the amount of the incumbrances and nothing was paid on the debts of the estate. To maintain that position section 9 (chapter 52) of the act exempting homesteads from attachment, judgment, levy or execution, or from sale for the payment of the debts of the householder, is relied upon. By that act Thomas Hogan, being a householder, had an estate of homestead in the land to the amount and value of $1000, if there was an estate of that value above the incumbrances, and the exemption continued after his death for the benefit of his wife surviving so long as she continued to occupy the same and of the children until the youngest child should become twenty-one years of age. The act provides for setting off the homestead if the value of the premises exceeds the exemption, and if they are not divisible a sale may be made and the amount of the exemption be paid to the person entitled to the homestead. Section 9 provides that no sale shall be made of homestead premises on a decreе or execution unless a greater sum than $1000 is bid therefor, and an execution sale of a homestead worth less than $1000 is void. (Wiggins v. Chance,
The bill charged fraud and collusion between Catherine Hogan and her attorney and the administrator to enable her to secure title to the land and alleged ignorance on the part of the complainant of the nature of the proceedings or their intent and purpose, but the answer denied every such charge and allegation, and the cause having been heard on the bill and answers the answers were to be taken as true. (Derby v. Gage,
The decree is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the original bill, retain the cross-bill, and extend the time for payment of the mortgage debt ninety days from the entry of the decree under the remanding order.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
