Court Opinion

ID: 4909397
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-09 00:29:50.089265+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:20.276272
License: Public Domain

Opinion.— 1. Was the sale made in 1866 a nullity? It was not made to pay debts, for the application for sale neg*67aíived the existence of indebtedness. The record does not show the existence of a widow or children for whose year’s allowance, or for money in lieu of exempt property, the money was needed. The case presents simply a sale within twelve months from the original grant of letters of administration on the suggestion of the administrator that there were no debts and “ no necessity for keeping the administration open any longer; ” . . . that the tract of land is incapable of partition, there being seven stocks of heirs, and that 66 the interest of said heirs would be best subserved by selling said land for cash.” The proceedings were had under the probate act of 1848. The authority to sell for partition arises under that act from an inability to divide the property so ordered to be sold among the heirs who have been ascertained and duly cited.
The partition proceedings could be commenced at any time after the first term of the court after the expiration of twelve months from the original grant of administration by one or more of the heirs or devisees filing a complaint and causing the administrator, the heirs and devisees to be cited to appear at a regular term of the court, etc. P. B., arts. 1348 and 1357. After service of such citation, a decree of partition may be made ascertaining the heirs, etc., and the share to each, and appointing commissioners. P. B., art. 1358. When, in the opinion of the commissioners, “any portion of the estate is not capable of a fair and equal division,” they may report the fact, and on failure of any of the-distributees to take the land at its appraisement, then sale may be ordered. P. D.,-, art. 1360.
The presence of the partition stage in the administration originates the necessity for, and confers the power of, sale upon the court under the statute. These proceedings are facts apparent on the record; they may not be supplied by the representations of the administrator. If they exist the power of sale follows; nor will its irregular exercise affect a purchaser. It is insisted that as the county court had the power to order the sale for partition, the exercise of it is *68Avithin the jurisdiction of the court, and that any departure from the statutory mode by Avhich the authority to sell is acquired is but an irregularity and not subject to collateral attack. To this we- cannot assent.
The rule invoked cures by presumption only the absence of or irregularity in the proceedings calling into exercise the power, but does not supply the facts constituting the foundation for it, or conferring it. If it exists, irregular proceedings or want of preliminary proceedings will not vitiate the judgment. If the power exists as a consequence of facts, the facts should exist. If the record shows their absence and negatives their existence, the decree based upon their supposed existence would on its face be without authority.
The probate courts have been repeatedly held to be of general jurisdiction within the subjects committed to them. Their judgments when within their general power will be supported by the presumptions of regularity and validity. But a court of general jurisdiction has not, by reason of the credit given to its decrees, the power to decide upon imaginary facts, and in the absence of parties, and claim effects to follow as legal results. In Littlefield v. Tinsley, 26 Tex., 357, in discussing the validity of a sale made under the probate act of 1846, which, as in the act of 1848, required citation to the heirs, etc., before partition, the court (Moore, J.) held: “ If the order of sale is not a part of the proceedings had by the judge in making the distribution he has no authority to order the sale; if it is it cannot be done until after notice has been given.”
In Flanagan v. Pierce, 27 Tex., 79, “ The sale of the land was sought upon the score of convenience, ‘ to enable the administrator to settle up said estate and satisfy all the ■heirs.’ The county court is not authorized by law to order a sale of land belonging to an estate except for the payment of debts,- or for the purpose of making partition, Avhen, by the report of the commissioners of partition, it shows to the court that the land itself cannot be parti*69tionech” . „ . “ Ordinarily a purchaser afc administrator’s sale will be protected if there has been an order of sale, sale, and a subsequent confirmation by the court. This is because, in such cases, the presumption is indulged that ' the facts were such as to warrant the sale, . . . and not because the court has any general power or jurisdiction which enables it to go beyond the law, and to order the sale of the land of an estate in a case not provided for by the statute.”
In Withers v. Patterson, 27 Tex., 496, it is stated in the opinion that “it is certainly true that if a court orders a sale of land when the circumstances do not exist which, under the law, authorize it to do so, it acts, in doing so, without jurisdiction, or, in other words, without authority.” . . . Again, page 499: “ It is to be borne in mind that while the county court has the power to order the sale of land belonging to an estate which is committed to it for the purpose of administration, it has no general power to sell the lands of any estate. It can order the sale for the payment of debts and expenses of administration, to raise the amount of the allowance for the surviving wife and children, and in certain cases for the purposes of partition and distribution among heirs. The court has no power conferred upon it under the law to sell the land of an estate for any other purpose.” Speaking of a sale for other purposes, “such a sale being a nullity may be impeached collaterally; and when the want of power in the court to order the sale is shown by the record itself, then the constructive notice which the record furnishes the purchaser makes the nullity effective as to him and destroys his claim of title.” Again, page 501: “ Whenever there is a want of power in the court its act is a nullity, no more and no less in one case than in every other, and without regard to the particular facts or circumstances.” ... If the record is silent, and the order “ is one which the court had power, under any circumstances, to make, then it will be presumed' *70that the circumstances existed which authorized the court to make the order or judgment in question; but presumptions will not be indulged in which are repelled by the record itself.”
In this case the record is not silent as to the cause upon which the court acted in ordering the sale. Presumptions' of regularity are of no aid to the decree. They “ are indulged in the absence of proof and not against proof.” Id., and cited with approval by Chief Justice Boberts in the leading case of Guilford v. Love, 49 Tex., 741.
Jurisdiction over the person on notice will be conclusively presumed where the record is silent. 49 Tex., 741; 27 Tex., 253. Hot so as to authority over the subject-matter. Horan v. Wahrenberger, 9 Tex., 319, and authorities; Freeman on Judgments, §§ 116, 117, 119a. This is a case of absence of authority, not of defective or irregular exercise of it. As the power did not exist to order the sale no title passed to Pridgeon, and of course none was divested out of the estate.
We therefore hold that the court had no authority to order the sale, and that the want of authority was patent upon the record. This result is given as the application of the statutes of 1848, the recognized powers of the probate courts, and the rules to be applied when their action is drawn into litigation. They are given in the leading cases of Guilford v. Love, 49 Tex., 715, and Withers v. Patterson, 27 Tex., 491, from which we have so largely extracted, in connection with the more general rules recognized in Horan v. Wahrenberger, 9 Tex., 319. See, also, Fisk v. Norvell, 9 Tex., 13; Duncan v. Veal, 49 Tex., 611; Northcutt v. Johns, 49 Tex. 456; Rorer on Judicial Sales, sec. 474; Freeman on Judgments, secs. 116 and 117, and cases cited. It follows, therefore, that there was no legal obstacle to Lockhart foreclosing his vendor’s-lien claim upon the land; and that such foreclosure sale passed title to him.
2. Without discussing the legality or necessity of the *71Jeffries administration, or the necessity for a second sale in favor of Lockhart so that he could have a title satisfactory to himself, we hold that the order of sale, the sale, and irregular return of sale made by the attorney of the administrator, and the order confirming it entered by the court March 5, 1870, sufficiently vested title to the land in Lock-hart to put into operation the statutes of limitation in favor of the actual adverse occupancy and claim of the defendants.
The deed from Griffith to Fridgeon of date April 2,1867, through which defendants claim, was duly recorded April 9, 1867. If a complete deed on its face it is not before us (not being set out in the record); it would be sufficient, in connection with its other requisites, to support the five years5 statute of limitations. We do not think it such as to form a link in title or color of title under the three years5 statute.
3. The defendants were not direct purchasers from Fridgeon, though claiming through his title. It seems from the testimony that they bought from parties having actual possession of the land. The improvements in one instance at least were made by the defendants, who had been in possession for more than twelve months before the suit was filed.
The statute allowing improvements to be suggested gives (Sartain v. Hamilton, 12 Tex., 222) their value to the actual possessor in good faith. The good faith is more a fact than a conclusion drawn from the comparative validity of the superior title set up against him with relation to that under which he entered. Good faith only requires that a man keep his eyes open and deal fairly with what he could readily discover. Possession under a title apparently good, with an honest" belief of its validity, is sufficient. A void link in the chain of. title will not affect the right to improvements, unless, perhaps, the party making them was party to such void deed, or is chargeable with bad faith. *72Berry v. Donley, 26 Tex., 747; Hill v. Spear, 48 Tex., 585; Farris v. Gilbert, 50 Tex., 350.
For the reasons that the court refused to submit to the jury the plea of five years’ limitations, and excluded testimony of the value of improvements under the suggestion of good faith, the judgment should be reversed.