86 N.C. 198 | N.C. | 1882
The plaintiffs in this action seek to have set aside a decree of the late court of equity. As made by the pleadings and exhibits the case is as follows:
David Smith died in the year 1862, seized of a parcel of land situate in the city of Wilmington, and leaving as his only heirs at law, the feme plaintiff and a son named David, both being infants of tender years.
At December Term, 1862, of the county court for New Hanover (199) County, the defendant Schonwald applied to be appointed guardian of both of said infants, and supposing that such appointment had been conferred upon him, gave a bond sufficient to cover their joint estates, but the records of the court show his appointment as guardian for David only. In 1863, at the fall term of the court of equity held for said county, the said defendant Schonwald, as guardian of both infants, filed a petition for the sale of the land, assigning as a reason for its sale, that it yielded small rents and that the interest of the children would be promoted thereby. At the same term, it was referred to the master to ascertain and report whether the sale as asked for, would be conducive to their interests. The master took *168 evidence in the shape of affidavits, as to that point, which he returned with his report recommending the sale to the court; and thereupon the court made a decree directing a sale of the land after advertisement, for cash.
The sale was made as directed, and a report thereof made to Spring Term, 1864, for said court, one C. E. Thorburn being the purchaser at the price of ten thousand dollars, and a decree of confirmation and for execution of the title to the purchaser. The purchaser paid the money to the clerk and master of the court, who paid it to the defendant Schonwald as guardian of the infants, and being Confederate currency, it perished in his hands by the results of the war. The master made the purchaser a deed, who afterwards sold it to the defendants, Kidder and Martin, for value and without any notice of any irregularity in the proceedings, and they in turn sold it to the other defendants. The feme plaintiff intermarried with the co-plaintiff before becoming of age and has been covert ever since. At the trial certain issues were submitted, and responded to as follows:
(200) 1. Was James T. Schonwald appointed guardian of the infants, Kate and David, and if so, when? No.
2. Was a petition filed in the court of equity, and an order of sale made after a reference to the master, and his report that it was for the interests of the infants, and did the sale take place, and was the same reported and confirmed, and order for title made, and deed executed to the purchaser as alleged? Yes.
3. Had Schonwald been appointed guardian of the feme plaintiff at the time of the filing of the said petition, or was he appointed at any time before payment of the purchase money and the execution by the clerk and master of the deed to the purchaser? No.
The court thereupon gave judgment declaring that the order of sale made at Fall Term, 1863, of said court of equity, be annulled and vacated as to the feme plaintiff and her interest in the land, and also the order confirming the sale and the deed made in pursuance thereof, so far as related to her title and interest in said land, from which judgment defendants appealed. We cannot concur in the view taken by His Honor. The most that can be said towards impeaching the decree of the court of equity, the vacation of which is the purpose of the present action, is, that it was irregular. It was the work of a court of *169 competent jurisdiction pertaining to the whole cause, its subject matter, and its parties, and was but an instance of that general authority over the estates of infants, which the courts of equity have so long exercised, that it is now found impossible to trace the source from which it was derived. 2 Story Eq., Sec. 1328.
The plaintiff's counsel indeed insisted, that in this state the power of the court of equity to sell the lands of an infant at (201) the instance of his guardian, was a special one, and wholly derived from the statute of 1827 (Rev. Code, ch. 54, sec. 32), and that unless every requirement of the statute was strictly complied with, no attempted sale of an infant's lands could be valid; that in such case it would be an act void, because done wholly without authority, and not one irregularly done within the scope of the court's authority.
If the premises assumed by counsel be true, then certainly his conclusion is correct. For all the authorities agree in saying, that those powers which are created and conferred specially by statute, are to be strictly construed, and whatever formalities are prescribed must be punctually fulfilled, as the courts have no power to dispense with the requirements of a statute, and most especially is this principle rigidly adhered to, in the case of judicial and probate sales. Freeman on Void Judicial Sales, Sec. 53; Leary v. Fletcher,
But since the decision made in Williams v. Harrington,
We have been thus particular in determining the question of jurisdiction, because upon it depends another principle decisive, as we regard it, of the rights of the parties, and indicating very clearly that so much of the judgment in the court below as annulled the title acquired by the purchaser at the master's sale, is erroneous.
The title acquired at a judicial sale of lands made by a court of competent jurisdiction, is not rendered invalid by reason of the reversal of the decree for irregularity in the proceedings, of which the purchaser could have no notice. There is no case in our reports, coming within our observation, that goes the full length of this doctrine. The nearest approach to it is in Chambers v. Brigman,
In such cases the law proceeds upon the ground, as well of public policy, as upon principles of equity. Purchasers should be able to rely upon the judgments and decrees of the courts of the country; and *171 though they may know of their liability to be reversed, yet they have a right so long as they stand, to presume that they have been rightly and regularly rendered, and they are not expected to take notice of the errors of the court, or the laches of parties.
A contrary doctrine would be fatal to judicial sales and values of title derived under them, as no one would buy at prices at all approximating the true value of property, if he supposed that his title might, at some distant day, be declared void, because of some irregularity in the proceeding altogether unsuspected by him, and of which he had no opportunity to inform himself. Under the operation of this rule, occasional instances of hardship (as this one of the present plaintiffs seems to be) may occur, but a different one would much more certainly result in mischievous consequences, and the general (204) sacrifice of property sold by order of the courts. Hence it is, that a purchaser who is no party to the proceeding, is not bound to look beyond the decree, if the facts necessary to give the court jurisdiction appear on the face of the proceedings. If the jurisdiction has been improvidently exercised, it is not to be corrected at his expense, who had a right to rely upon the order of the court as an authority emanating from a competent source — so much being due to the sanctity of judicial proceedings.
In the case of Williams v. Harrington, supra, the plaintiff's land had been sold under an order of the court of equity, upon a petition filed for him by one Chalmers, professing to be his guardian. He sought to avoid the sale upon the ground that he had no such guardian, and as a means of testing its validity sued at law for the land. The court held that, admitting it to be true that his petition was filed by one not truly his guardian, its only effect was to render the proceeding irregular, and that it could not be collaterally assailed. So we say in this case, the proceeding under which the plaintiff's land was sold was certainly irregular; but being nothing more, and possessing so much virtue as not to admit of its impeachment by any other tribunal, then, upon every principle of policy, or strict right, it should not be allowed to be reversed (though in a direct proceeding in the same court) at the cost of an innocent purchaser.
If injured, the plaintiff must look for redress, either to him who falsely assumed to be her guardian, or the officer who incautiously passed her estate into his hands. Though, if it be true that an appointment of a guardian for her was really made, and that the omission of the clerk to record the same is the source of trouble between the parties, it would be better, perhaps, to have the record of the county court so amended as to show the truth — which amendment can *172
(205) be made under the sanction of the superior court. Stanly v. Massingill,
The plaintiff's action must be dismissed with costs to all the defendants except the defendant Schonwald.
Error. Judgment accordingly.
Cited: Gilbert v. James,