Court Opinion

ID: 7153123
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:03:43.143284+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:15:10.834193
License: Public Domain

*122Opinion by
Judge Pryor:
F. H. Winfrey died, leaving a last will and testament, and his widow with eleven children surviving. By the provisions of his will, Thomas C. Winfrey, who is the appellee in this case, was left his executor. He devised all his estate, consisting of land and slaves, to his wife to be used and worked for the benefit of herself and children during her widowhood or until the youngest child arrived at age and upon the happening of either event his estate, real and personal and mixed, to be sold and the proceeds to be divided between his children.
The appellant (the executor) purchased all the interest of the children of the devisor in the lands devised, except the interest of W. J. Winfrey, Kitty Winfrey, and two of the children of Bledsoe: The slaves devised were all set free and the widow, not being able to keep up the farm, desired to. sell her interest and that of her daughter and invest the proceeds of sale in other lands.
The executor, in order to gratify the wishes of the widow, or to convert the interest he had bought into money, sold the tract of land by executory contract to the appellant.
This contract obligated Winfrey to the effect, that in a few days he would make to the appellant a good and sufficient deed for the land, the same to be signed by the widow and W. J. Winfrey as well as himself. The deed, it seems, was prepared and ready for delivery, but the appellant refused to receive it, insisting that the executor had no. right to sell under the will, and that one of the children of the devisees and two of the grandchildren were under age. The appellee, who was a1 son of the devisor and executor of his will, having purchased all the interest of his brothers and sisters in the land who were of age, except W. J. Winfrey, and he, having united with him. in the deed, was able to make a perfect title to the whole tract except the interest of Kitty Winfrey and the two Bledsoe children, all these of whom were infants. ■ The evidence establishes the fact beyond controversy, that Lester knew of this defect in the title when he bought the land. Kitty’s interest in the land was one-eleventh of the whole tract, and the interest of the Bledsoe children was two-sixths of one-eleventh. The appellant admits in his answer that the appellee told him that his title was good except as to one-eleventh and two-sixths of one-eleventh of the land sold him.
*123Winfrey, in order to perfect the title, had the guardian of these infants to file a petition for the sale of their interest, under the provisions of Chapter 86 of the Revised Statutes. The guardian seeks an investment of the proceeds of the sale belonging to Kitty in other land. The land -was sold under this ex parte proceeding and Winfrey became the purchaser. The sale was confirmed by the court, and a deed made him by the commissioner. Between the date of the confirmation of the sale, and the deed to the commissioner, Kitty died. The proceeding under which the sale of the infants’ property was made, although informal, is such a compliance with the statute as passes the title to the purchaser. Winfrey has paid the money into court and it is there held for reinvestment. Second Volume Revised Statutes, page 314; 3 Bush 384. His title to the whole tract was perfected before .the appellant by the terms of the executory agreement was to get the possession. There is nothing in the record showing that the time for making the conveyance formed an essential part of the agreement. The general doctrine that courts of equity will not ordinarily regard time as the essence of a contract in the sale of land, applies to this case. Magoffin v. Holt, 1 Duvall 97, 3 Monroe 34.
If a good title can be made in a reasonable time the vendee will be compelled to accept it. Craig v. Martin, 3 J. J. Marshall 50.
There is- no fraud or unfairness alleged, or charged, against the appellee in the sale of the land, but on the contrary the defects' in .the title were disclosed before the sale was made.
We see no reason why the title is not perfect unless the will of Winfrey precludes any sale from being made. The widow and children have all conveyed their interest in the land as before recited, except the interest of the one-eleventh and the two-sixths of one-eleventh. The executor, by the provisions of the will, was invested with the full power to sell this property when the youngest child arrived at age. The youngest child, Kitty, died and the children survivors were then all adults. The object of the devisor in postponing the sale until the period designated by the will was to enable the wife to hold and use the property until all the children were old enough to receive their distributable share, and in the meantime have them supported and maintained out of it. The executor has exercised his power to sell, not at the exact time prescribed by the will, but when the object of giving him such power is consid*124ered, he has done substantially what the will required him to do. Those who can object to the sale have already conveyed their interest, and although we are inclined to the opinion that the executor could sell as such, still the defect in the title, if any, is cured by the sale of the interests of the infants under the petition of their guardian. The confirmation of the sale to Winfrey by the court previous to the death of Kitty will preclude her heirs from setting up any claim to it.

Garnett, for appellant.

James, for appellee.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.