122 Va. 102 | Va. | 1917
delivered the opinion, of the court.
The essential facts and circumstances of this litigation will sufficiently appear from the discussion of the questions involved.
In the year 1905, the executors and trustees under the will of Robert W. Burke, deceased, filed a bill for conformity against the beneficiaries of the estate, in the Corporation Court of the city of Staunton, invoking the instruction and direction of the court in the discharge of their duties. The bill also contained the prayer that plaintiffs be authorized to sell certain bank stock belonging to the estate to pay debts; that proper compensation be allowed the executors; that they be permitted from time to time to settle their accounts in the suit, and for general relief. The corporation court assumed jurisdiction of the suit and the administration of the estate, making the necessary orders therein as occasion required, and the case has remained on the docket hitherto.
Among other property belonging to the estate was a valuable farm located in the vicinity of Staunton, which is described in the will as containing about 775 acres. The will invested the executors with extensive powers as trustees in the mánagement of the estate; and authorized them, in their discretion, to sell, publicly or privately, and convey any real estate owned by the testator at his death, and to reinvest the proceeds upon the trusts set out in the will. But in case of sale of the 775-acre farm, the proceeds were directed to be invested separately and kept apart from the
Accordingly, by deed bearing even date with the petition and decree, a conveyance was made by the executors to appéllants, H. B. Sproul and D. G. Ruckman, reciting, among other things the decree of the corporation court authorizing and directing the executors to sell the farm at their discretion, and in their judgment, and for the consideration named in the written proposal, of the farm in question, described as “containing 800 acres more or less.” On January 22 the executors received the cash payment and bonds for the deferred instalments, and delivered the deed to the purchasers. On January 27 they filed their report of sale, which recited that the sale was made “in pursuance of the decree entered herein on January (20) 1915,” the receipt of the cash payment and bonds for the.purchase price, and conveyance of the land to the purchasers. The executors requested the approval by the court of their action, and that the sale be confirmed. Thereupon, the court entered a decree declaring that the trustees had properly exercised their discretion under the will, that the sale had been made •in pursuance of the former decree, that the land brought' a fair price, that the action of the trustees in connection therewith was approved, and, therefore, ratified and confiimed the sale. The decree also approved and confirmed the compensation allowed the real estate agent and directed its payment.
On March 11 the purchasers filed their petition in the cause, in which, after setting out the terms of their offer
The executors made specific answer to all the material averments of the petition, and controverted petitioners’ right to any relief in the premises. The cause was heard on the pleading and evidence, and the decree under review dismissing the petition was entered.
In their answer respondents suggested that if the court should be of opinion that petitioners had been misled to their injury, that the proper measure of relief would be to place all parties in statu quo by rescinding the sale.
We are of opinion that in no aspect of the case were appellants entitled to relief.
I. At the date of appellants’ offer to purchase the farm, E. B. Burke was living in the city of Washington; his co-executor, C. S. Hunter, was on the ground and practically conducted the negotiations on behalf of the- estate. The farm was estimated by the testator in his will to contain about 775 acres, and Hunter did not observe that the deed to Sproul and Ruckman described it as 800 acres, more-or
II. Viewing the controversy from a different angle, we are of opinion that the sale was a judicial sale. The minds, of the parties never met on any. other hypothesis. The executors had already invoked the aid and' direction of the. court in the administration of the estate and the discharge of their duties as executorial trustees. The court had assumed jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter, and, from time to time,, entered decrees in furtherance of the objects of the suit. In these circumstances, it was plainly the duty of the executors, whatever may have been their powers under the will, to submit this transaction, perhaps the most important that had arisen in the course of their administration, to the judgment and decision of the court. Accordingly, Hunter’s acceptance of appellants’ tentative offer, to purchase the farm was • expressly made subject to the confirmation of the court. This qualified acceptance was approved bv his co-executor and received
It is the settled rule in this State that although executors have power under the will to sell the property belonging to .the estate, the possession of such authority in no way deprives them of the right to go into a court of equity for aid and guidance in the discharge of their duties, and to have the property sold under its decrees. Shepherd v. Darling, 120 Va. 91 S. E. 737; Gooch v. Old Dom. Tr. Co., 121 Va., 92 S. E. 846.
Testator’s will was the source of appellants’ title, and that instrument and the petition for the sale apprised the. intending .purchasers that the farm for which they were negotiating was supposed to contain 775 acres. Still, they stood by and suffered the court to direct the sale upon that assumption, and afterwards to confirm it, without objection. At a subsequent term, it is true, they sought the aid of the court to relieve themselves from the consequences of an assumed deficiency of acreage in the farm. But we think it clear that the sale was a judicial sale, and the doctrine is well settled in this jurisdiction that the principle of ccwoat emptor strictly applies to judicial sales. Speaking generally, all objections of which the party complaining had previous knowledge come too late after a decree of confirmation, The case of Long v. Weller, 29 Gratt. (70 Va.)
There is striking resemblance between the case in judgment and that of Terry v. Coles, 80 Va. 695, 700-702; indeed, the two cases are not distinguishable in principle. In the latter case it was held: ' “Sale made by order of a court of competent jurisdiction, pendente lite, is a judicial sale. An executor having authority under the will to sell land, declines to exercise his authority, but applies to the court for instructions and directions, and is ordered to make sale and to report it to the court for confirmation; whereupon he makes and reports the sale to the court as ordered, such a sale is a judicial sale.”
These cases sufficiently illustrate the controlling principles involved in this case, and render the further review of the authorities unnecessary.
Upon the whole case, we think the decree of the corporation court was plainly right, and it must be affirmed.
Affirmed.