10 Or. 298 | Or. | 1882
By the Court,
This is an action of ejectment brought hy the heirs at law of one Joseph Wright to recover certain real estate in Umatilla county, Oregon, of which Joseph Wright died seized. The appellant, Hollis Edwards, lessee of N. G-. Blalock, claimed title for his lessor under an administration sale after the death of said Wright, to pay debts due from the estate. The facts were stipulated, and to be tried, without the intervention of a jury, by the court. As conclusions of fact, the court found the death of Joseph Wright, the appointment of W. C. White as administrator of the estate, his acceptance of the trust, the execution of the proper undertaking and the taking of the required oath of office, &c., that on or about the 5th day of October, 1874, the said administrator duly presented to the county court of Umatilla county, sitting in probate, a petition for leave to sell the real property belonging to the estate; that the petition for the order of sale did not state the amount of sales of personal property, the charges, expenses, or claims still unsatisfied, did not describe the real property to be sold, its condition or value, and the same was not verified by the administrator or any one on 1ns behalf; that notwithstanding these defects of substance, the court entertained said petition and ordered a citation to be issued to the heirs of said Wright; that on the 5th of April, 1875, by the consideration of said court, it was ordered that the real estate belonging to the estate be sold; that N. G-. Blalock became the purchaser. And as conclusions of law, that the county court did not have jurisdiction to order the sale of the real estate described in the complaint in this action; that the heirs at law, by the acceptance of service, did not waive their right to question the jurisdiction of the court; that
No bill of exceptions accompanies the record, nor is there any evidence in the record, except the facts stipulated, to show the basis of the findings of the court. What the record of the proceedings of the county court discloses in ordering the sale, which constitutes the ground of defense to this action, we can only know from the findings. The regularity of the appointment of the administrator was found by the court, and was not questioned at the argument. The point of dispute was upon the sufficiency of the petition to give the court jurisdiction to make the order of sale; the appellant claiming that the want of such facts in the petition as found by the court, although specified in the statute as matter to be alleged in the petition, was not fatal to the jurisdiction, and the respondent insisting that such facts were material, and that without them, or at least something equivalent in substance, the court was without authority to make the order of sale, and consequently, that all its proceedings thereunder were oorct/m non judAce, and no title vested in the purchaser. The findings show that the petition for the order to sell, upon which the court assumed to exercise jurisdictional power, did not state the amount of sales of personal property, the charges, expenses, or claims still unsatisfied, nor describe the real estate to be sold, nor its condition or probable value, and that the petition was not verified.
While the constitution provides that the county court shall have jurisdiction pertaining to probate courts, its authority to order the sale of real property of an intestate is
The statute points out with great particularity the conditions which must exist to invoke the jurisdiction of the court, and the facts necessary to be set forth by averment in the petition by the administrator to exhibit that condition of things to the court, and to bring the real property sought to be applied to the payment of debts, within the jurisdiction of the court, by describing it, thereby identifying it, as well as its condition and probable value. When the proceeds of the sale of the personal property are exhausted, and claims still remain unsatisfied, a condition of things exist which authorize a resort to the real estate to discharge them. But the mere existence of such facts do not confer jurisdiction — they only present a case which authorizes the administrator to invoke the jurisdiction of the court. To confer actual jurisdiction, the jurisdictional
In Stuart v. Allen, 16 Cal., 501, the court say: “It will be remarked that it is immaterial, so far as the question of jurisdiction is concerned, whether the statements of the petition are true or not, the jurisdiction resting upon the averment in the petition, and not upon the proof of them.” In Haynes v. Meek, 20 Cal., 312, Mr. Justice Field says: “When an order of sale is relied upon, the question is, was the order made in the case provided by the statute? To determine this, we must, in the first instance, look to the petition for the sale which is the foundation of the order; assuming, of course, that the court acquired jurisdiction originally to grant administration upon the estate. The proceeding for the sale, though made in the general course of administration, is a distinct and independent proceeding, in the nature of an action, of which the petition is the commencement, and the order of sale is the judgment. We must then examine the petition, to ascertain whether a case is presented by its averments within the statute upon which the court can act.” As the statute contemplates the ex-
Looking, then, at the petition in the light of the findings, and testing it by these principles, it is not merely defective, but deficient in the statement of any facts necessary to give jurisdiction. None of the facts required by the statute are substantially, or at all, -incorporated in the petition by means of which jurisdiction is acquired. The amount of sales of personal property, the charges, expenses and claims still unpaid are not stated, nor any equivalent facts upon this subject, nor is any property described, nor its condi
In Overton v. Johnson, 19 Mo., 400, it was held that the omission to file the accounts, lists and inventories as required by the statute, was not necessary to give the court jurisdiction when their substance was incorporated in the petition itself; for the court say: “ In the body of the petition the general amounts of the different lists and inventories are stated.” In Bryan v. Bander, 23 Kansas, 97, the petition fully set forth all the facts required by the statute, except that the description of the land was subject to the objection of vagueness, or indefiniteness, and the court say: “ When a petition contains sufficient matters to challenge the attention of the court as to its merits, and such a case is thereby presented as authorizes the court to deliberate and act, although defective in allegation, the cause is properly before the court, and jurisdiction is not wanting. The allegation that the land was situated in Miami county was some description, and no property was ordered sold but what was in that county. Hence the order to sell really described the property in the petition, and in such a manner that it could be identified.” (Reed v. Howe, 39 Iowa, 559; Montgomery and wife v. Johnson, 31 Ark., 80; Iverson v. Loberg, 26 Ill., 187.)
These authorities are cited to illustrate the extent to which the courts have gone “to avoid the evils and hardships, affecting titles injuriously, which would result from
Judgment affirmed.