Court Opinion

ID: 6516864
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:27:27.903385+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:02.856927
License: Public Domain

HEAD, J.
Thomas N. Allison, as the administrator of the estate of James L. Allison, deceased, under order of the probate court, sold the lands of said estate for the purpose of division among the heirs at law. The sales ■were made for part cash and part on time. The administrator, himself, purchased one tract of land, reported the sales, and the same were confirmed by the court. In June, 1891, a final settlement was made, the administrator charged himself, or was charged, with the proceeds of the sales, including the price of the land purchased by him, and decrees were rendered in favor of the complainants and other heirs of the estate. After the settlement was concluded and on the same day, the *416administrator reported the payment of' the purchase money, an order for the conveyance of the title was made, and deeds were executed accordingly. No notice of said report was given the heirs. In January, 1895, certain of them filed the bill in this case to enforce a vendor’s lien on the land purchased by the administrator, for the payment of the decrees rendered in their favor.
The bill alleges- that the funds of the estate, other than the purchase money due from the administrator for the lands purchased by him were applied in pajnnent of debts, expenses of administration and in making payments to the heirs and that the aggregate amount of the decrees rendered on final settlement, constitutes and is the balance of the purchase money due from the administrator. Appellant Bogart claims title under a mortgage executed by Allison in May, 1892, to secure an indebtedness due to him, and the appellants, Washington and Cowan, claim liens under judgments filed and registered in the office of the judge of probate. Thos. N. Allison died intestate December 18th, 1893, and appellant Bogart is his administrator.
Demurrers were interposed to the bill, some of which were sustained, and the bill was amended. To the bill as amended, the same and other demurrers were filed all of which were overruled, and from the decree overruling the same, this appeal is taken.
The statute carefully guards against a conveyance of the title to lands sold by an administrator, under order of the probate court, until the entire purchase money has been paid. The payment must be judicially ascertained and conveyance ordered by the court, according to prescribed methods of procedure conferring upon the court jurisdiction of the matter. Until such ascertainment and order, the title of the heirs remains as a security of the purchase money remaining unpaid, enforceable, in a proper case, in a court of equity. These principles seem to be not controverted by counsel. Their briefs collect the authorities bearing upon them.
In the present case, the administrator was, himself, the purchaser at his own sale. Without paying to the heirs, or into court for distribution amongst them, the purchase money, he made, regularly in other respects, final settlement of his accounts in the probate court, and thereupon charged himself, without objection, or was *417charged in invitum (whether the one or the other does not appear) with the amount of the purchase money owing by him. Decrees were rendered severally, against him, in favor of each of the heirs for their respective distributive shares ; which decrees, in fact, according to the averments, represented only the purchase money so charged — all other funds having been otherwise appropriated, as above stated.
Against the relief sought, the defendant interposes the action of the probate court confirming the purchaser’s report of payment of the purchase money and ordering ■titles to be made. Proceedings of that character, instituted by an administrator, in his own behalf, as purchaser, have been well defined by past decisions of this court, as being essentially without the administrator’s representative character, and when conducted without notice to the heirs are purely ex parte, possessing no legal validity — conferring no jurisdiction of the persons of -the heirs upon the probate court. — Anderson v. Bradley, 66 Ala. 263; Ligon v. Ligon, 84 Ala. 555; Dugger v. Tayloe, 60 Ala. 504. According to the bill, the defendant Bogart, as mortgagee, had notice of the complainants’ lien, at the time of the execution of the mortgage, as well as the constructive notice afforded by the infirmity in the chain of title. — Ketchum v. Creagh, 53 Ala. 224. The other defendants, judgment creditors, do not occupy as high ground, even, as the mortgagee. The order of the court to make titles cannot, therefore, be regarded for any purpose.
But, it is insisted, the complainants waived their security, and are estopped by charging, or suffering the administrator to be charged, with the purchase money on his final accounting, wherefore no notice to the heirs was necessaiy to the validity of the order for titles. The proposition, in effect, is that the waiver and estoppel bar the relief sought, and the order to make titles is not a matter of importance. If complainants are estopped by the fact that the purchase money was charged on the final settlement, all consideration of the case may rest at that point. The defendant in such case need not seek to uphold the validity of the order to make titles and the conveyance executed in pursuance thereof, since we are not now, necessarily, concerned with legal titles.
In support of the alleged estoppel we are referred to *418the arguments upon which our former decisions of Ligon v. Ligon, 84 Ala. 555, and Wood v. Stanley, 78 Ala. 348, ■ proceeded. In Ligon v. Ligon the facts were that a stranger was a purchaser of a part of the land and the administrator, of another part. A year after the administrator had made final settlement (and presumably, though not so appearing in the record of- the case,, charged himself with the purchase money), he reported payment of the purchase money by himself and the other purchaser, and obtained orders for conveyances.' Notice was not given to the heirs of these proceedings. The heirs afterwards moved to vacate these orders, one of the grounds being their want of notice. We held that so far as the purchase by the stranger was concerned, notice was not necessary, but was necessary as to the purchase by the administrator, and as to him, the order was not vacated. Speaking by Justice Clopton, we said: “When the administrator becomes the purchaser of real estate sold by himself as such, he occupies antagonistic relations — of purchaser claiming an adverse right, and of administrator, representing the heirs as to the collection and distribution of , the purchase money. Having the right to receive payment as administrator, and being under obligation to pay as such purchaser, presumed payment arises when the purchase money matures, so far as to render him chargeable therewith in the settlement of his administrator’s accounts, but not for the purpose of entitling him to a conveyance of title. So long as he continues administrator, and. the purchase money is unaccounted for, there is no payment, such as is required by the statute, to authorize the court to order a conveyance of title. When the purchase money becomes due, the heirs have the right to elect whether they will treat it as paid and charge the administrator, or, as unpaid, and resort to the land to enforce its payment. The order that a conveyance be made to him, without notice to the heirs, and the execution of such conveyance, deprives them of this right of election, and divests them of the legal title, without an opportunity of being heard. The statute should not be construed as intending that the administrator may discharge the land from liability for the purchase money, and himself obtain title by an ex parte proceeding. In such case, the same necessity exists for notice to the party whose *419rights are to be affected, as for notice to the personal representative when the application is made by the purchaser ; and the same person being the administrator and -the purchaser, ex necessitate, notice must be given to the heirs. When the administrator is the purchaser, at his own sale, the application for an order of conveyance of title, if made by him, should be properly regarded as made in his capacity of purchaser, and not of administrator. In such case, notice to the heirs is essential to the validity' of the order. “The right to elect,J; here spoken of, whether they (the heirs) will treat the purchase money as paid and charge the administrator, or as unpaid, and resort to the land to enforce its payment, is the basis of the contention in favor of the estoppel now alleged. In the earlier cause of Dugger v. Tayloe, supra, the question was, the effect of an order to make titles, on application of the purchaser, without notice to the personal representative, who had sold the land under decree. The effect of the decision was that if the personal representative had receive legal notice of the proceeding, the order of the court adjudging that the purchase money had been paid and ordering a conveyance, would have constituted a conclusive adjudication between the purchaser and the administrator and heirs, of the fact of such payment, precluding any further action or proceeding by either against the purchaser for the recovery of the purchase money; and that the administrator Avould have been, conclusively, chargeable with it in favor of the heirs. Therefore, it was the duty of the administrator and heirs to attend to their rights at the time of that adjudication. So far as the heirs were concerned, they being, through the notice to the administrator, before the court, there can be no doubt of their capacity to Avaive the security Avhicli their legal title afforded them, and stand upon the responsibility of the administrator; and though the purchase money was not, in fact, paid, they would be judicially estopped to allege it, by submitting to confirmation of the report of payment of purchase money and order to convey; and the conveyance, when executed, would divest them of their title.
In the Ligon and the present cases, ths administrators, themselves, were the purchasers, and reported payment of the purchase money and asked for titles to *420themselves. From the standpoint of equity,if the heirs had been notified, the parties to the proceedings would have been the administrators,in their individual capacities, as purchasers, on the one side, and the heirs on the other. The sole matter for judgment would have been the payment velnon, as against the heirs themselves, of the purchase money, for it is upon that fact alone that the order to make titles must be predicated. If the order of the probate court adjudicates anything it necessarily adjudicates that fact, which is the sole matter of judicial investigation. The case of Dugger v. Tayloe, and, indeed, the Ligon, Case, and all others touching the subject, show that the proceeding is a judicial one, the judgment therein having the properties of a binding adjudication of the subject matter between the parties. There is, however, a manifest difference in the effect of the adjudication in the two classes of action. Where a stranger is the purchaser and applies for titles, the allegation is that he has paid the purchase money to the administrator. If that allegation be true, he is entitled to the order, and to a deed investing him with the unincumbered title of the heirs, whether the administrator has accounted, or shall ever account, to them or not. The demands of the heirs for the purchase money— whether they have been satisfied or not — are not involved in the proceeding, except in so far as the rights of the purchaser are concerned. The heirs lose the security which the law afforded, and the administrator becomes estopped to say he has not received the purchase money. -The remedy of the heirs against the’administrator is complete. But where the administrator is himself the purchaser, and applies for titles, the allegation, necessarily, is that he has paid the heirs the purchase money, for there is none other to whom he could have paid it.
• It inevitably follows, upon these principles, that, in the latter case, the administrator asking for a conveyance to himself, as purchaser, in order to prevail, must show that the demands of the heirs for the purchase money have been satisfied.
We can conceive of no element of satisfaction, -either ■actual or by virtue of equitable or judicial estoppel, in the mere fact that on a final settlement between the administrator and the heirs he charges himself, or is *421charged', with the purchase money, which enters into the personal decrees rendered thereon against the ad-' ministrator, it appearing, as in the present case, that there was no such confusion of accounts and-funds as to render it impracticable for a court of equity to separate the purchase money entering' into the decrees, from other funds. No one is affected by such a settlement but the administrator and heirs. His position is not in the least altered to his detriment. He owed the purchase money as purchaser. No greater liability was imposed upon him by having the amount thereof judicially ascertained. It was a mere change of the evidence of his liability, just as the case of any vendor who reduces the purchase money obligation to judgment. In no such case, without satisfaction, is the security of the vendor affected, whether it be a vendor’s lien proper, or a quasi mortgage growing out of the contract of sale. We have, in this case, nothing more nor less, in principle, than a vendee insisting that he has a perfect title to the land, discharged of the security, because the vendor has caused his liability to be judicially ascertained; at the same time admitting that he has not paid the purchase money. Whether correctly so or not, the case of Wood v. Stanley, supra, where the purchase was by ,one of two joint administrators, was disposed of upon the same principles which govern the case of a purchase by a stranger, and cannot be accepted as an authority in support of the estoppel claimed to have arisen out of the facts of the present case.
The position that complainants, by charging the administrator, thereby elected to take independent security, to-wit, the liability of the sureties on the administrator’s bond, cannot stand any legal test which can be applied to it. That security existed as soon as the bond was executed, and yet we have seen how carefully the statute saved the legal title in the heirs, also, for their security, until it should be judicially ascertained, in a proceeding by which they were bound, that the purchase money had been paid. Suppose there had been no settlement, and hence, no judicial ascertainment of the administrator’s liability, as purchaser, for the purchase money, and the heirs were proceeding by bill in equity to enforce their security against the land, if there is any merit in the proposition that the security was waived *422by the bond of the administrator, is it conceivable why the waiver would not be as efficacious in defense of that bill as it is now? In such a case, if there was merit in the point,' the administrator would need only to show, by demurrer, that the remedy of the heirs was to charge the administrator on his settlement and proceed against his sureties. The statute is too plain to admit of any such defense. The expression in Wood v. Stanley that, ‘ ‘by the rendition of the decrees which fixed a liability on the co-administrator, and the sureties on their official bond, a new security was acquired,” is, as we have just stated, inaccurate. The rendition of the decrees judicially measured and ascertained the extent of a liability of the sureties already existing. It was but the application of a remedy to enforce the existing liability. But if it were true that a new security was acquired, the taking of new security, in the absence of an agreement to that effect, would not impair an existing mortgage security created by the contract of the parties. This is not a case of a vendor’s lien, strictly speaking. By the contract itself, and the plain mandate of the statute, the heirs retain the title to the lands as security. As we endeavored to make emphatic in Hester v. Hunnicutt, 104 Ala. 282, following Bankhead v. Owen, 60 Ala. 467, and many other cases therein cited, such a transaction is essentially a mortgage, not a vendor’s lien in the proper interpretation of that term. We have decisions which lose sight of the distinction; and Wood v. Stanley, and Ligon v. Ligon, supra, in some of their features, may be regarded as of that class. Por some expressions upon the nature of the lien of the vendor, see Wells v. Cody, ante, p. 278.
We think, uj)on the averments of the bill, complainants are entitled to relief.
Affirmed.