37 Mich. 93 | Mich. | 1877
The plaintiff in error was plaintiff in the court below. Her action was trespass guare clausum, and the facts were found by the circuit judge as follows: “ The land in controversy is situate in Monroe county, Michigan, and formerly belonged in fee to Michael Seymour, who resided in said county, and died February 20th, 1849, intestate. Administration of his estate was granted to his widow, Christeine Seymour, by the. probate court of Monroe county, May 27th, 1849, who accepted the trust, qualified and acted as administratrix.
“The files of said probate court in the estate of said deceased show that commissioners were appointed by said court to receive, examine and adjust claims against said estate; that said commissioners gave the notice required by law, performed their duty as such, and on the 7th day of January, 1850, made return of their proceedings as required by law, having allowed claims against said estate to the amount of ($70.15) seventy and fifteen one-hundredths dollars. To pay this indebtedness forty acres of land belonging to said estate were sold by said administratrix by order of the probate court, for the sum of $135.00, and the first administration account rendered on the twenty-sixth day of April, 1850, shows the debts and expenses of settlement of the estate paid and a balance of $10.34 in the hands of. the administratrix. On the fourth day of April, 1859, the said administratrix presented to the probate court her petition, setting forth that the aforesaid forty acres of land had been sold to pay the debts of the deceased; that those debts were all paid; that there was nothing in the hands of the administratrix to support the four children of said deceased and asking leave of the court to sell the remaining forty acres belonging to said estate (being the land in controversy. in this suit) which had been appraised in the inventory at one hundred and fifty dollars, for the purpose of supporting-said children and to pay debts already contracted in their support and the charges of administering said estate, including future probable charges, estimated at $25.00.
“On the twenty-third day of May, 1859, the probate court
“The bond on sale is dated May 25, 1859, and approved July 9, 1859. The oath before sale on file, was taken June 15, 1859. Affidavits of due publication and of posting notices of sale are on file. Sale made pursuant to notice July 30, 1859, for §440. A report of sale of the premises pursuant to such notice was made July 30, 1859, and the sale was confirmed August 1, 1859, and administrator’s deed given August 1, 1859. The proof shows that the purchaser at the sale, and those claiming title under him, down to and including the plaintiff in this suit, have occupied the land continuously from the time of the sale without objection, until near the time of the commencement of this suit in August, 18T6; that the land is all fenced, most of it improved, and has no buildings upon it; that the disabilities of the heirs at law had been removed for more than six years when suit was commenced.
“The proof also shows that the defendant in this caséis the agent of the heirs at law, and all the heirs at law of said deceased, and as such agent, and by their authority, performed the acts complained of in this suit as trespass, and that Toll, the plaintiff, at the time of the alleged trespass, held the premises as a purchaser in good faith, under said administrator’s deed, and that neither party to the suit was in actual occupancy.”
It will be seen from this finding that the circuit judge was of opinion that the administrator’s sale was absolutely void. The plaintiff disputes this conclusion, but she also insists that, conceding the sale to be void, she was entitled to recover, the defendant being precluded by Comp. L., §§
These sections are a part of the Eevised Statutes of 1846, and are found in the chapter which empowers the probate courts to license the sale of lands by executors and administrators for the payment of debts, and the charges of administering the estate. In the general statute of limitations a section which was enacted in 1863 and took effect January 1, 1864, provides that “No person shall bring or maintain any action for the recovery of any lands, or the possession thereof, or make any entry thereupon, unless such action is commenced or entry made within the time herein limited therefor after the right to make such entry or to bring such action shall have first accrued to the plaintiff or to some person through whom he claims; to wit: within five years where the defendant claims title to the land in question by or through some deed made upon a sale thereof by an executor, administrator or guardian, or by a sheriff or other proper ministerial officer, under the order, judgment, decree or process of a court or legal tribunal of competent jurisdiction within this State.” Comp. L., § 7137.
The defendant contends that the sections first above cited cannot support the plaintiff’s title, because the sale under which she claims was not made for the payment of debts or the costs of administration, but was made, as the application itself shows, after the debts were paid and charges satisfied, and for a purpose which, however commendable, if legal, was not provided for by the statute under which
That the plaintiff claims title to the land in question through a deed made upon a sale thereof by an administrator is shown by the finding. He is not, however, strictly within the words of the statute, because he is not demanding its shield of protection as defendant, but is relying upon it to support his cause of action as plaintiff. This however is not material; for if his title has become perfected under the statute, so that it cannot be questioned in a suit brought against him, neither can it in a suit brought by him. Cooley Const. Lim., 365, and cases cited in notes.
The principal question to be considered under this statute is, whether one can rely upon it without showing that the deed under which he claims was made to carry into effect a sale lawfully ordered. It is urged on behalf.of the defendant with much ability that a void administrator’s deed cannot form the foundation for an adverse possession under the statute; and that as the statute only purports to protect sales made under the order, etc., of a competent' court, a sale made in reliance upon a void order is not within its provisions; that being in law no order.
There are some early decisions in which statutes more or less analogous were considered, and in which the conclusion was reached that the legislature must have intended a sale lawfully authorized, and that its meaning could not embrace a sale where the administrator or officer had proceeded without lawful warrant or authority. We shall refer to these cases, and also to others in which they have been examined and questioned.
Of the cases referred to, Patton’s Lessee v. Easton, 1 Wheat., 476, and Powell’s Lessee v. Harman, 2 Pet., 241were cases in which the construction of a state statute adopted by a state court was followed, as being obligatory upon the federal courts. They were both overruled in Green v. Neal’s Lessee, 6 Pet., 291, on the authority of a later state decision. They may consequently be dismissed
The construction of this statute of 1863 has, however, once before been' in controversy before us, and we were of' opinion that an exécution sale made upon a void judgment was not protected by it. Millar v. Babcock, 29 Mich., 526.. The conclusion was derived from the phraseology of the statute, which does not protect sales as such, but sales made-under judgments, etc. The case is in point here, and must, deprive the plaintiff of the protection of the statute of 1863 if the order on which she relies was void, for want of jurisdiction. This is a short and special statute of limitations,, and no one can take advantage of its provisions who is not within them. The question here is not whether a void deed might uot support an adverse possession, but whether an adverse possession has been had under such a deed as that, statute indicates.
We should be compelled, therefore, before we could apply the statute of 1863 to the case, to find that the sale had been lawfully ordered. But under the statute first recited the-case is different. By that it is sales made by executors and administrators “under the provisions of this chapter” that-, are protected. The chapter, as already stated, relates to sales for the payment of debts and the costs of administration. The defendant insists that the statute “was intended to apply to cases in which the court had jurisdiction, but.
But it is said the sale protected must be made “under the provisions” of the statute, and that it is not so made if the court had no jurisdiction to order it. In strictness this is true: but as every sale which would be defective for want of compliance with any provision of the statute, would also, in the same sense, be not made “under the provisions of the statute,” we cannot suppose the legislature intended so narrow a construction. Indeed, such a construction would defeat the statute entirely; for no sale is strictly under the provisions of the statute which is made in disregard of the statute in any necessary particular. Unquestionably the statute was intended to protect parties in the occupation of lands against defects of some sort which without the statute would be fatal, or at least would render the proceedings voidable; in other words, to protect their occupation under proceedings which in some particulars had not been pursuant to the statute but in disregard of it.
What then is the meaning of the statute when it speaks of sales “by an executor or administrator under the provisions of this chapter?” It certainly does not mean valid sales, for those need no protection. Neither can it mean sales lawfully ordered; for it makes no mention of any order, and speaks of sales only. Neither can it mean sales in which the statute has in all important particulars been followed; for the manifest purpose is to make an undisputed possession cure defects in. the proceedings. Indeed, it cannot possibly, as we conceive, mean more than this: a sale purporting to be made under the provisions of the chapter, and in pursuance of an order professedly based upon them. If the administrator with such an order has made sale under the provisions of this chapter and given a deed under which the necessary possession has been had, we think the case is fairly within the intent of the statute.
Was such the case here? We think it was. Indeed we
But it is denied by the defendant that the legislature has power to validate a void sale. This is not what is attempted here as we think. The statute is intended as a statute of limitation in the proper sense. It is true that the section first recited provides that “no action for the recovery of any estate,” etc., shall be maintained unless “commenced within five years next after the sale;” and if these words are taken literally they would seem to cut off an action at the expiration of five years though there had been no adverse possession. So construed the statute would
The conclusion is that the judgment must be reversed, and judgment entered for the plaintiff with costs of both courts. As no damages are found, nominal damages only can be recovered.
(4594.) See. 50. No action for the recovery of any estate sold by an executor or administrator under the provisions of this chapter shall be maintained by any heir or other person claiming under the deceased testator or intestate, unless it be commenced within five years next after the sale; and no action for any estate sold in like manner by a guardian shall be maintained by the ward or by any claiming under him, unless it be commenced within five years next after the termination of the guardianship, except as hereinafter provided.
(4595.) Sec. 51. The preceding section shall not apply to persons out of the State, nor to minors or others under any legal disability to sue at the time when the right of action shall first accrue; but all such persons may commence such action at any time within five years after the removal of the disability, or their return to this State.