Bibb v. Bishop Cobbs Orphan Home

61 Ala. 326
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 61 Ala. 326 (Bibb v. Bishop Cobbs Orphan Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bibb v. Bishop Cobbs Orphan Home, 61 Ala. 326 (Ala. 1878).

Opinion

MANNING, J.

The irregularities and errors in the proceedings of the Probate Court upon the application of Alger-non S. Bibb as administrator of the estate of Mary Terry, deceased, (of whom appellees were heirs-at-law,) for the sale [330]*330of the land embracing the parcel now in controversy, were such as would have compelled us to reverse the decrees of that court, if upon proper objections and assignments of error, they were under review upon an appeal therefrom, and nothing more was disclosed by the record, than is now here shown. But that sale was made in 1857, before the late war; and it is attacked collaterally in a suit of appellees, which treats it and the proceedings of the Probate Court relating to it, as wholly void. Whether they are so or not, depends, in the first place, upon the question whether the Probate Court had jurisdiction to decree a sale of the land, and not upon an inquiry into the correctness or error of its acts in exercising that jurisdiction. This has been long settled in this State, by judicial decisions.— Wyman v. Campbell, 6 Porter, 219; Doe ex dem Duvall’s Heirs v. McLosky, 1 Ala. 709; King v. Kent’s Heirs, 29 Ala. 549, and cases there referred to; Satcher v. Satcher’s Administrator, 41 Ala. 26; DeBardelaben v. Stoudenmire, 48 Ala. 643; Wright’s Heirs v. Ware, 50 Ala. 549; Pettus v. McClanahan, 52 Ala. 55.

It has also further been ruled that when proceedings and a decree of this kind are brought into question collaterally, “public policy requires that all reasonable presumptions should be made in support of such sales,” and that “ if a different rule prevailed, purchasers would be timid and estates consequently be sold at diminished value, to the prejudice of heirs and creditors.” — Goforth v. Longworth, 4 Ohio, 129, cited in Wyman v. Campbell, 6 Porter, 242, and in other Alabama cases. In the case last named, Collier, C. J., said: “It is impossible to conjecture the vast amount of property holden under sales made by order of the Orphans Court, and we all know that in at least three-fourths of the cases, the records are remarkable for their want of technicality and legal precision.” Of the application to sell, this court in King v. Kent’s Heirs, declared: “ When the petition is directly assailed, the question is one of pleading, and the intendments are made against the pleader: but a different rule prevails when the proceedings have gone into a decree under which rights of property have attached. Then, every reasonable intendment in the construction of the language of the petition must be in favor of the validity of the paper. . . . We should understand the petition as it is reasonable to infer that the party who made it and the judge who acted upon it, did understand it, and not as they were bound to understand it.” — 29 Ala. pp. 553, 554. And again in Wright’s Heirs v. Ware, 50 Ala. pp. 557-8, it was reiterated; [331]*331“ If the sufficiency of the petition had been put in issue by demurrer, or assailed on error, judgment against it must have been pronounced. Then, as has been said in this court, all intendments would have been indulged against the pleader. When the proceedings ripen into a decree and are collaterally assailed, and rights of property have attached, the rule is changed, and every reasonable intendment is made in favor of the validity of the decree. All questions of pleading which the court had a right to decide, are conclusively adjudicated, and whether correctly or not is not the subject of inquiry. . . . Beading the petition as it was doubtless read by the Court of Probate, and intended by the petitioner to be read, it must now be considered as averring the conviction of the petitioner — that a sale of the lands was more beneficial than of the slaves: and thus read it fully supports the jurisdiction of the Court of Probate.” Id. ibid. It is quite clear upon the authority of these cases, and the similarity of the averments in the petitions upon which the two latter were founded to those made in the present case, that the allegations of Bibb, the administrator, of the size and situation of the parcel of land of which he prayed a sale, of the fact that it had but one residence or dwelling-house with its appurtenant out-houses thereon,— which needed repairs that the heirs were unable to make, and of their inability to improve the land, concluding with the words, “ it is manifest that the said lands can not be equitably divided between the heirs of the said estate unless by a sale of the same,” are .to be taken as equivalent to a direct averment to that effect, and as bringing into exercise the statutory jurisdiction of the Probate Court to sell this real estate. The petition was certainly understood by the probate judge as alleging of the land “ that the same can not be fairly and equitably divided between the heirs-at-law,”— for, he so describes it in the minute entry showing when it was filed; and that allegation contains the very words of the act.

But, though it be thus shown that the jurisdiction to sell was acquired, yet according to a statute of 1854, (now section 2458 (2225) of the Code of 1867,) “no order for the sale of' land belonging to any estate must be made, when there are minors or persons of unsound mind interested in such estate, unless the Probate Court has taken evidence by deposition as in chancery proceedings, showing the necessity of such sale. . . . Any order of sale and sale made without a compliance with the requisitions of this section, shall be [332]*332wholly void.” And on behalf of appellants, it is contended that no such depositions are produced or shown to have been taken, and the order of sale and sale were therefore void.

An entry on the minutes of the court of its proceedings on the day when the petition was considered and the order of sale made, after a recital of the appearance of the heirs by their previously appointed guardian, sets forth that “E. M. Kerr, commissioner heretofore appointed to take testimony in said cause, having reported the same,” it “is approved and ordered to be filed; . . . and the court proceeded to examine said testimony, and from said testimony it appears to the court that said land can not be equitably divided among the heirs-at-law without a sale thereof,” &c.; whereupon the order of sale was made. This brings the case directly within the ruling upon this very point of Wright’s Heirs v. Ware, supra. And “testing the recitals of this record by the presumptions extended to judicial proceedings when collaterally attacked, we feel justified in declaring that it appears from the record that depositions proving the necessity of sale, were taken as in chancery proceedings.” Hence, the argument founded upon this supposed defect Mis to the ground.

The propositions discussed are the only ones on which it could be contended that the orders and decrees of the Probate Court are void. So far as they were merely voidable and might have been reversed on appeal for error, they can not be collaterally assailed; and to what extent they might have been so impugned, we need not now inquire.

The record shows that the Probate Court had jurisdiction to make the sale, and was, in fact, the vendor of the land through the agency of the administrator. Under its order, the land was sold, and the sale was reported to and confirmed by it.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Ala. 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bibb-v-bishop-cobbs-orphan-home-ala-1878.