Eor the plaintiffs’ case see Warner v. Hill, 149 Ga. 464 (100 S. E. 393), in which this court reversed a judgment of nonsuit. The case is here again, the plaintiffs complaining of the judgment of the trial court overruling their motion for a new trial. The verdict of the jury is in the shape of questions propounded by the court, and answers of the jury to such questions.
But the actual receipt of these funds by these wards is not necessary to show their ratification of the illegal sale of this land by the administrator. Of course the receipt by them of their portions of these funds, with knowledge of the facts, would ratify the illegal sale of the administrator. When their guardian received their portions of the proceeds of this sale from the administrator, and they afterwards, with knowledge of the facts, receipted him therefor, this would amount to a ratification of his act in their behalf and of .the administrator’s sale. They treated these funds as their own.. They could have repudiated the administrator’s sale and the action of their guardian in receiving for them their portions of the proceeds of this sale; but instead of doing this, they treated these funds in the hands of their guardian as their property, and recognized his liability to them therefor. When they did this and receipted him as their guardian for these funds, they ratified his act in receiving them, and thus ratified the sale of the administrator of this land from which these funds arose. Where executors, acting under direction in the father’s will, collected a policy of insurance, to the proceeds of which testator’s children were entitled, and for which they could have sued the insurance company thereon, and the children procured a decree in chancery against the executors for the whole amount of the collection, one of them could not afterwards recover against the insurance company in an action on the policy. Equitable Life Assurance Society v. May, 82 Ga. 646 (9 S. E. 597.)
Batifieation involves full knowledge of all the facts. DeVaughn v. McLeroy, 82 Ga. 687, 700 (10 S. E. 211); Dolvin v. Am. Harrow Co., 125 Ga. 699 (54 S. E. 706, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 785).
But when a person gains knowledge that he has received the benefit of a portion of the proceeds of an unauthorized sale, he should return or tender back such proceeds; and his failure to do so would be a ratification of the sale. Johnston v. Milwaukee etc. Co., 49 Neb. 68 (8) (68 N. W. 383); Dolvin v. Am. Harrow Co., 125 Ga. 708 (supra).
The jury found that Will C. AYarner and Mary Warner actually and knowingly received from their guardian portions of the proceeds of the administrator’s sale of this land, with knowledge of
There is such a thing as equitable estoppel, applicable to land. One who silently stands by and permits another to purchase his property without disclosing his title is guilty of such a fraud as estops him from subsequently setting up such title against the purchaser. Civil Code, § 4419. The purchase by an administrator at his own sale of lands of his intestate is not void; but is only voidable at the election of the heirs of the intestate. They can affirm or disaffirm the sale. Fleming v. Foran, 12 Ga. 594; Grubbs v. McGlawn, 39 Ga. 672 (2); Moore v. Carey, 116 Ga. 28 (42. S. E. 258). This sale was likewise not void but voidable, because made at West Point without proper order. Warner v. Hill, 149 Ga. 464 (supra). If, under these circumstances, the heirs, with knowledge of their rights, stand by and allow the purchaser at such sale, or his assignee, to make valuable and expensive improvements on the land so bought, they will be estopped from asserting title thereto against the purchaser or his assigns. Southern Marble Co. v. Darnell, 94 Ga. 232 (21 S. E. 531); Vandiver v. Byrd-Matthews Lumber Co., 146 Ga. 117 (90 S. E. 960). This court has held that “Beneficiaries of trust property sold under an invalid order of the chancellor, who for years have seen the purchasers erecting valuable improvements thereon without objection, are estopped .from setting up title thereto.” Iverson v. Saulsbury, 65 Ga. 724 (7).
We do not think the second ground of alleged error in this matter is sound. It would restrict the trial judge unnecessarily, when he instructs the jury to make special findings of the facts in an equity cause, and for this purpose submits to them certain questions, to require him, in sirbmitting each question, to give in charge to the jury the law applicable to the issues involved in each case. It would not be error for the trial judge to pursue this course, and would probably be the better practice; but he can pursue the course of charging the jury fully the law of the case, and
It is further urged that the language in which question 12 is couched is confusing and misleading, in that it puts too much stress upon the question whether either of the plaintiffs had allowed improvements to be made upon the property by the defendant, and too little stress was placed on the question whether their conduct in this respect was inequitable. We do not think this position sound.-
All of the above objections to the decree in this case, except the one raising the question whether the plaintiffs, if they were tenants in common with Hill, would be estopped by improvements placed on this land by him, have been disposed of in what has been said above, in dealing with the other questions raised in this case. One tenant in common would not be estopped from asserting title' to his undivided interest in land by knowingly permitting another tenant in common, without objection, to erect valuable, permanent, and expensive improvements on the joint property during the existence of the joint tenancy, and before the former cotenant had been actually ousted by the latter, or until the latter tenant in common took exclusive possession of the joint property with notice to the other tenant in common of his adverse possession. Counsel for the plaintiffs assert that the present case falls within this rule.
Judgment affirmed.