Burgett v. Apperson

52 Ark. 213
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 52 Ark. 213 (Burgett v. Apperson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgett v. Apperson, 52 Ark. 213 (Ark. 1889).

Opinion

Cockrill, C. J.

The appellant, who is the daughter and sole heir of Isaac Burgett, deceased, presented her. petition to the Circuit Court for a writ of certiorari to quash an order of the Probate Court confirming a sale of her father’s lands made by the administrator to pay debts. The court caused the writ to issue, but quashed it upon an inspection of the record.

It appears from the Clerk’s return to the writ that the Probate Court refused to order a sale of the lands upon the petition of Apperson, who was a creditor cf the estate. Apperson appealed to the Circuit Court and there obtained an order of sale. The administrator prosecuted an appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court, but it was affirmed here. The cause was remanded to the Circuit Court and an order was entered there directing the administrator to make the sale at a time and upon terms named in the order. The original order of sale made by the Circuit Court had been certified to the Probate Court for execution, but no action was taken under it pending the appeal. The latter order was never certified to-the Probate Court, but the administrator offered the lands for sale in pursuance of the new direction of the Circuit Court,, and reported to the Probate Court that it had not been sold because no one had bid two-thirds of the appraised value. The report was received and approved, but no other order was made. Something more than a year thereafter, without further-authority from the court, the administrator offered the lands-for sale without regard to their appraised value ; and Apperson,. the creditor upon whose petition the order of sale had been made, became the purchaser at the sum of $17,000. No money-was paid on the purchase, but Apperson executed his notes-for the purchase money, and received from the administrator what is termed in the record, a certificate of purchase. These-proceedings were reported to the Probate Court and were there approved, when the administrator immediately resigned. No deed has been made.

The petitioner alleges that she was an infant during these transactions, and had no information of them; that the administrator was her guardian; that at the time the sale was-confirmed by the Probate Court, his condition of body and mind was such that he was incapable of protecting her interest that a part of the land which was sold was her father’s homestead at the time of his death; that it is described in the petition for, and in the advertisement of, sale, and in the administrator’s report of sale, as the “Burgett home place.” It also appears that Apperson was the only creditor of the estate at. the date of sale; that his debt amounted to about $10,000, principal and interest, and that a body of land comprising 1634. acres and appraised at $79,340, was offered in bulk to pay his. debt. These facts are substantiated by the Probate Court record, except as to the petitioner’s age and want of information, and the condition of her guardian, which appear from the petition and by affidavit adduced at the hearing.

This proceeding was begun a short time after the petitioner was apprised of the facts, and within less than a year after she had reached the age of 18, which is the age of majority for females. The suit was begun three years and eight months after the order of confirmation.

The Circuit Court declared that the errors complained of did not render the sale a nullity, and for that reason declined to interfere.

1. Home-STEAD: sale of: Certiorari: Practice. That the Probate Court had no jurisdiction to sell the home stead during the minority of any of the decedent’s children is the settled law of this State. McCloy v. Arnett, 47 Ark., 445; Nichols v. Shearon, 49 ib., 75; Stayton v. Halpern, 50 ib., 329. But as that fact did not avoid the sale of the lands, which the court had jurisdiction to sell, and as the Circuit Court had no guide in this proceeding to separate the one from the other, it was not error to decline to interfere upon that ground and leave the petitioner to her action at law for the possession of the homestead tract.

It must be conceded that the Probate Court proceeded irregularly in every step taken in that tribunal after entering the Circuit Court’s order of sale upon its records; but none of the errors go to the jurisdiction of the court, and, consequently, its action is not void. The. errors are as follows:

2. Probate Court: Sale of land: Executor of order made on appeal. It approved the administrator’s execution of the order sale without learning, from the record what disposition this court had made of the matter on appeal. The character of judgment it is to execute when an appeal has been prosecuted to the Circuit Court, should be ascertained from a certified copy of the record of that court; and if the matter is brought to this court for review, it should receive the certificate after the mandate of this tribunal has reached the Circuit Court. But, in this instance, the order of sale which had previously become the Probate Court’s judgment by entry there (presumably before the appeal here was sued out) was affirmed, and the jurisdiction of that court to execute it, which had been suspended by the appeal, was restored, at least from the time when the Circuit Court entered its order in accordance with the mandate. After that it was not without power to proceed. Green v. Clark, 24 Vt., 136; Durham v. Durham, 16 Gray, 577; Curtis v. Beardsley, 15 Conn., 318.

3. Same : Same. 4. Same: Same. The court erroneously approved the offering of the lands for sale by the administrator, when no time had been previously fixed by it for a sale, and subsequently approved the report of the sale to Apperson made more than a year after-wards under like circumstances. But a sale upon a day other than that fixed by the order, if made in pursuance of a subsisting judgment of a superior court, is not a nullity after confirmation. It is an irregularity only, and like selling without notice of sale, or without notice of the application to sell, which the statute requires, does not render the sale void, according to a long line of decisions beginning with Borden v. State, 11 Ark., 12. The statute which requires that lands which have been offered by an administrator and not sold for want of a bid equal to two-thirds of their appraised value, shall not be re-offered within twelve months (Mansf. Dig., sec. 184), does not require a new order condemning the lands to sale. That judgment has already been entered in accordance with another provision of the statute (sec. 173), and the day fixed for its execution having passed, it only remains for the court to provide anew for its execution. (Secs. 174, et seq.) The sale and confirmation, after the expiration of the year, were not, therefore, made without a valid judgment to support them, and are not nullities.

5. Certiorari: when granted. But a want of jurisdiction is not the only defect that the writ of certiorari is capable of reaching. The statute prescribes that it may be used to correct erroneous proceedings as well as want of jurisdiction. Mansf. Dig., sec. 1368. The writ is granted in two classes of cases, first: where it is shown that the inferior tribu nal has exceeded its jurisdiction ; and, second, where it appears that it has proceeded illegally and no appeal will lie, or that the right has been unavoidably lost. Roberts v. Williams, 17 Ark., 43; Randle v.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ark. 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgett-v-apperson-ark-1889.