21 S.E. 797 | N.C. | 1895
The right of the plaintiff to recover in the action for title and possession of a lot was made to depend upon the question whether a record of an administrator's petition for sale for assets with the decree and sale under which the plaintiffs claimed title were open to attack and were shown to be invalid and subject to collateral impeachment by the heirs-at-law of the decedent.
The petition was filed in the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of McDowell County, at the Fall Term, 1864, in accordance with the provisions of Revised Code, ch. 46, sec. 47, et seq., and not under the Act of 1868 (Bat. Rev., ch. 45, sec. 61, et seq.). The form of the petition is verbatim in all material respects that laid down in Eaton's Forms, p. 529, and universally used by the profession at that time.
At the Spring Term, 1865, of the court, there was an order for the sale of several other tracts of land and the terms of sale were prescribed therein. Under a proper construction of this order entered at the ensuing Fall Term in connection with that referred to above, it is manifest that the lot in controversy was to be sold, (714) if at all, upon the terms prescribed in the former order for the sale of the real estate generally. It would be sticking in the bark to hold otherwise, when in fact the terms adopted were precisely those prescribed as to the sale of the other property and no possible jeopardy to the rights of the defendants could have resulted therefrom.
The statute (Revised Code, ch. 46, sec. 44) from which the court derived its authority, permitted the granting of a "license" to sell the real estate, and accordingly the first order also declared that the administrators of Elliott should have "license" — not that they should be required — to sell certain other property. The subsequent order that they should have leave to dispose of the town lot described in the petition, if in the settlement of the estate it should be found sufficient, was not in our opinion what is termed a conditional judgment or a judgment void as an attempt to vest in the administrators judicial power. The court unquestionably granted leave to sell the town lot just as it had given its sanction in advance to the sale of the other land for assets. If after obtaining the license, by reason of finding some personal assets, of which they previously had no knowledge, or because of some claim against the estate supposed to be just proving invalid, the approximate estimate of indebtedness had proved incorrect, it will not be contended that the administrators would not have been authorized to desist in their discretion from selling before disposing of even all the tracts described in the first order of the court. They *412
were empowered, not compelled to sell, and the proviso in the second order gave them no new authority, but was merely in affirmance not only of what was their discretionary power, but of their duty as ministerial officers of the court, acting for the best interest (715) of the heirs as well as the creditors. The statute authorizing the sale of land for assets is in derogation of common law, and the courts would not be inclined to deny to the administrators the right to desist from selling when they had manifestly attained the object for which the law had clothed them with power to sell. The converse of that proposition that they could continue to sell such lands as were embraced by the license, as long as the necessity apparently existed for raising additional assets, must be likewise founded upon reason and principle.Adams v. Howard,
There were four terms of the court held every year, though jury trials may have been had at only two of them. The order granting the license under which the lot was sold was not made till the Spring Term, 1865, the second term after the filing of the petition at the Fall Term, 1864, and it recites that subpoenas had been served upon all of the parties in accordance with the equity practice, either actually or by publication. Shall a purchaser, who buys under such a decree, be subjected to the hazard of losing, after thirty years, a tract of land for which he has paid because either by accident or design a summons or an order has been lost out of the record? In Hare v.Holloman,
In the exercise of the discretionary power of this Court we deem it best to refuse the motion based upon newly discovered testimony. Brown v.Mitchell,
It is needless to cite authority to sustain the proposition that the decree was sufficient in form and that it was not essential to its validity that it should have been signed.
For the reasons given the judgment must be
Affirmed. *414
Cited: Clark v. Riddle,
(718)