130 Wis. 419 | Wis. | 1907
Tbe order striking out tbe second demurrer is not appealable, not being specified as' sucb in tbe appeal statute (sec. 3069, Stats. 1898). That is ruled by Gianella v. Bigelow, 92 Wis. 267, 65 N. W. 1030, and Jacobs v. Beebe, 95 Wis. 389, 70 N. W. 468.
Appellants’ counsel suggest tbat if tbe county court failed to obtain jurisdiction to appoint -Herman EJeman adminis
The further claim is made that the allegations of the complaint on the question of fraud are mere general statements; not complying with the rule that the facts claimed to constitute the fraud, not mere conclusions, must be pleaded. Riley v. Riley, 34 Wis. 372; Crowley v. Hicks, 98 Wis. 566, 74 N. W. 348. That claim does not appear to be well taken to the extent of rendering the pleading open to attack for insufficiency. It states facts showing that a person, not entitled as matter of right to administration, was appointed to the trust; that he disposed of the personal properly of the -estate for an inadequate consideration, most of it going to the appellants; that the real estate including the homestead, which was not liable to sale for the payment of debts, was sold for that purpose without any licence authorizing the same; that such acts and others mentioned were done in consummation of a conspiracy between the administrator, the person who petitioned for his appointment, and the appellants to cheat respondents out of their property, and that appellants concealed the facts of the matter from respondents for many years and during their minority by isolating them on a farm, bringing them up in ignorance and preventing them from associating with outside people. Whether the allegation on information and belief that no license to sell
It is contended by respondents that the petition for administration was fatally defective because not made by a person entitled to administration, and that the order of appointment is void because the person named as administrator was not entitled thereto, so far as appears by the petition, under sec. 3807, Stats. 1898. The rule in Michigan under a statute similar to ours is as counsel contend. However,, this court has never given countenance thereto. It was held in Brunson v. Burnett, 2 Pin. 185, that the appointment of' a person as administrator, not entitled thereto by law, “was, in the highest degree, irregular, though not perhaps entirely void.” That decision has stood without criticism for over fifty years. The suggestion that such an appointment is probably erroneous only, has doubtless been relied upon timo and again since the decision was made, till it has come to be-understood that mere failure to state in the petition for administration all facts requisite to entitle the person named as administrator to the appointment, sufficient being shown to indicate that a cause for administration exists and that the application is in the proper jurisdiction, or failure to appoint as administrator a person designated by the statutes, is not such a defect as to render the administration proceedings initiated by the petition wholly void. That is supported by Taylor v. Hosick, 13 Kan. 518, where letters of administration were issued to a person not a relative, contrary to the statute, and Kelly v. West, 80 N. Y. 139; Maybin v. Knighton, 67 Ga. 103; Barclay v. Kimsey, 72 Ga. 725; Emerson
Our latest decisions touching the subject are in harmony with Brunson v. Burnett and the cases cited. In Welsh v. Manwaring, 120 Wis. 377, 98 N. W. 214, failure to appoint as administrator one competent therefor by statute was treated as judicial error, and in Perkins v. Owen, 123 Wis. 238, 101 N. W. 415, the appointment of an administrator where it turned out later that no such appointment was necessary because of there being a will was likewise treated. The same principle was approved in Jordan v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 125 Wis. 581, 104 N. W. 803, where the following language of Marshall, C. J., in Griffith v. Frazier, 8 Cranch, 9, 23, was cited with approval:
“In the common case of intestacy it is clear that letters of administration must be granted to some person by the ordinary [having the power of our county court], and, though they should be granted to one not entitled by law, still the act is binding until annulled by the competent authority,, because he had power to grant letters of administration in the case.”
In Pick v. Strong, supra, the court passed upon the identical question we have here in this decisive language:
“The letters of administration were introduced on the trial. They were, in this action, conclusive of the regularity of the proceedings resulting in their issuance. That they were issued to one not entitled to them, or upon the application of one who had no right to make such application, is an objection which could be made only on appeal from the order granting them, or, if such application could be made, upon an application to the probate court to vacate them. They cannot be attacked for such reasons in a collateral proceeding.”
“No authority is cited by the court to sustain the conclusion it reaches, which is in conflict with all the authorities that I have been able to find. If the order of the county court in this case is void, then the sureties of the public administrator were not responsible for his acts in administering the estate, and sales by him passed no title, for if the order was void he stood as if he had taken charge of the estate without' any order of court; and much graver consequences may, it seems to me, result from the rule laid down by the court than from that which the lawmaking branch of the government has seen proper to prescribe. ... In all the states or nearly all, provision is made for administration by a public officer, and nowhere, so far as I have been able to find, has departure by the probate court from the directions of the statute been held to make its order void.”
And also this:
“The universal current of authority is that in such matters the judgments of the county courts cannot be attacked collaterally unless the person upon whose estate administration is granted was not in fact dead or did not reside in the county.”
The allegations of the complaint on information and belief challenging the validity of appellants’ title Upon the ground that no license to sell the realty was granted, it is insisted, are, not sufficient to raise such question. That seems to be ruled in appellants’ favor by Union L. Co. v. Chippewa Co. 47 Wis. 245, 2 N. W. 281; State v. McGarry, 21 Wis. 496; Mills v. Jefferson, 20 Wis. 50. Respondents could easily have ascertained whether there was a record of any license to sell the
Counsel for appellants further contend that the allegation of the complaint that part of the realty was not liable for the payment of debts because of its being a homestead, which upon the facts stated under the statute descended to respondents free from the claims of creditors, is immaterial, since sec. 3884, Stats. 1898, existed at the time of the sale and authorized a sale of the homestead with other lands if the whole was incumbered by a mortgage, and that it should be presumed that such condition existed, since it is not negatived by the complaint. If any such negative was required it seems that the copy of the petition for the sale, which was made a part of the complaint and shows no special circumstances satisfying the statute referred to, is sufficient. As the respondents’ case stands on the complaint the whole legal title to the homestead was in them from the time of the second marriage of their stepmother, free from any right of interference by the administrator, and the sale of it for the purposes stated in the petition was without authority of law and void: It was expressly exempted from such sale by sec. 3874, Stats. 1898, which existed at the time of the proceedings in question. So the alleged sale did not pass any title to the property. Here there was no adjudication, so far as appears, either that the lands did not include a homestead or that facts existed permitting a sale of the homestead. There was a petition to sell the lands as if no question of homestead was involved, and the sale presumably was mgJe accordingly. Of course, under such circumstances a purchaser could obtain no better title than he would to land bought by him at an administrator’s sale which did not belong to the intestate at the time of his decease. *
The only remaining question presented that need be considered, since the second demurrer cannot be regarded as before us, is: Does the complaint as matter of law show fatal
That case does not seem to control because it went upon the theory that plaintiff had actual knowledge of such facts as if .acted upon with reasonable diligence would have led to a full discovery. Other cases cited, and many others that might be referred to, turned upon the same theory. In the Van Nortwick Case plaintiff’s knowledge of suggestive facts was established upon the trial. Here the complaint states that respondents did not discover the condition of things detailed till shortly before the action was commenced, and in June, 1905. There is no fact or facts disclosed which necessarily suggest that respondents are chargeable with having earlier obtained knowledge sufficient to put them upon inquiry. What may be shown on a trial by way of defense, and to what extent respondents may fail to establish the conditions pleaded excusing their delay, are far different questions.
The complaint states in substance as an excuse for the late •discovery, as substantially before indicated, that when respondents’ father died they were too young to appreciate their nights; that they were brought up in ignorance by the defendants, kept isolated on the farm for many years after the death ■of the father and prevented from mingling with outside people, great pains being taken in that regard, all for the purpose of guarding against their discovering the facts as to their nights. It would not be unreasonable for persons so treated
True, as claimed, where laches is in issue the plaintiff is chargeable with such notice as he might have obtained by investigation, provided the facts already known to him were such as to put a man of ordinary prudence on inquiry, which if pursued would bring home to him the real situation (Rogers v. Van Nortwick, supra; Melms v. Pabst B. Co. 93 Wis. 140, 66 N. W. 244), and a complaint in a case of this sort should show the particular wrongful acts, when they were perpetrated, and if so long before action as to suggest laches, when the discovery was made and what the discovery was. But that under our liberal rules of pleading is satisfied if the facts expressly and inferentially pleaded fairly cover the subject. Here sufficient was stated to constitute a fraudulent and illegal appropriation or disposition of respondents’ property, and the statement that they did not have any knowledge of the facts until June, 1905,'when they were informed of the situation and immediately commenced an investigation, inferentially pleaded that in June, 1905, they for the first time obtained information in respect to their being the real owners of the real estate in question, and the manner in which they had been deprived of their property, as alleged.
We will not pursue this subject further or attempt to discuss the cases cited, and the many judicial authorities at hand, showing that our decision is fully justified thereby. Such a treatment of the case would require a very long opinion without serving- any valuable purpose. Every case of this sort must stand or fall on its own peculiar facts. That which constitutes fatal laches under some circumstances' will not under others. It is one thing to condemn an alleged cause of
Thus it is considered that the complaint shows a cause of action for recovery of the whole land in question because of its having been obtained by fraud, and especially to recover the homestead forty because it was sold without authority of law.
By the OourL — The appeal from the order striking out the second demurrer is dismissed, and the order overruling the first demurrer is affirmed.