Cooper v. Sunderland

3 Iowa 114
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 3 Iowa 114 (Cooper v. Sunderland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Sunderland, 3 Iowa 114 (iowa 1856).

Opinion

Woodward, J.

'There are two acts of the legislature which have relation to the case. The first, is that of January 25th, 1839 (Rev. Stat. of 1842, 1843, chap. 99, 430), entitled an act concerning minors, orphans, and guardians. The second, is that of February 13, 1843 (Rev. Stat. 1843, chap. 162, 666), entitled an act relative to the probate of wills, executors, administrators, guardians, trustees of minors, and probate courts, and for defining their duties. For the sake of brevity, we will refer to these, as the first and the second act.

There is a difficulty presented in the second of the above acts, which calls for some preliminary attention. Chapter ten of this act, is entitled “ of the sale of lands, for the payment of debts, by executors, administrators, and guardians;” whilst chapter eleven, relates entirely to sales by guardians. The provisions of the two relative to guardian’s sales, are in some respects, dissimilar. The question is, which chapter is to govern in this cause. As the act has been repealed, we need not enter into a discussion of the matter, but will [121]*121only remark, that there is much which would lead to the idea, that the provisions of chapter eleven, relate principally to guardians of insane persons, spendthrifts, &c. This view would be countenanced' by the fact, that the title of chapter ten, refers to sales to pay debts, and a minor can have no debts, but for maintenance, and that for this, chapter eleven expressly provides; besides chapter eleven, and the first act above referred, to, cover the whole subject of minors and their guardians; and if chapter ten, be considered as relating to minors’ debts, and the charges in the case at bar be regarded as debts, in distinction from maintenance, still' section 24 of chapter 10, perhaps, removes the difficulty, by providing that in such cases, sales may be made as directed in this (10 th) chapter, “ excepting in the particulars in which a different provision is hereinafter made,” which refers to the next chapter undoubtedly. We shall, therefore, make chapter eleven our guide, and its provisions are in general like those of the preceding chapter.

The first question which arises is, upon the limitation of such actions. The second act, chapter 11, section 19, provides that no action for the recovery of any estate sold by a guardian, under the provisions of this chapter, shall be maintained by the ward, or by any person claiming under him, unless it be commenced within five years next after the termination of the guardianship.” Then follows an exception in favor of minors and others, under legal disability, to Avhom five years are allowed, after the removal of the disability. There is nothing in the ease showing that the action Avas not brought within five years next after the termination of the guardianship; and still more, it does not appear, but that it Avas brought, in due time after the removal of the disability of minority. On the contrary, the presumption from the facts shown, is, that the action is free from the objection that it was not brought in due. time. That it was not commenced within five years after the sale, is not a valid objection under the former acts, without adverting to the fact of their repeal. But it is said that the plaintiff’s right of action is barred by the Code, § 1508, [122]*122wbicb. is, that no person can question tbe validity of such sale, after the lapse of five years, from tbe time it was made.” Tbe sale was made on the first May, 1848, and tbe action was commenced the 13th of October, 1853, more than five years after' tbe sale. Tbe repeal of tbe act of February, 1843, by tbe Code, took effect on July 1st, 1851. Tbe question then, is, whether section 1508, of tbe Code, bars the plaintiff’s right to bring this action, to question tbe validity of tbe sale. The point is presented, but not argued. We are not disposed to regard this section of tbe Code as in tbe nature of a general statute of limitation, so as to apply it to sales wbicb bad taken place prior to the passage of that statute, but should limit its application to causes arising under chapter eighty-eight of tbe Code alone. But if it were to be regarded as an ordinary statute of limitation, then those principles would apply, wbicb are settled in tbe cases of Morris v. Slaughter, 1 G. Greene, 838; Forsyth v. Ripley, 2 Ib. 181; Minch v. Weatherford, 2 Ib. 244; Gordon v. Mounts, 2 Ib. 243.

Objection is made to tbe sale of the lot in this case, upon three grounds: First, because tbe court decreeing tbe sale, bad jurisdiction of neither tbe subject matter, nor tbe person ; second, because tbe minor was over fourteen years of age, when tbe petition for leave to sell, was filed; third, because tbe sale was made to tbe husband of tbe guardian. Tbe want of jurisdiction of tbe person, arises, if at all, from a want of notice to tbe minors'; and tbe questions involved in this objection, are difficult of solution. Tbe.American editors of Smith’s Leading Cases (5th ed.), Yol. I, p. 844, very truly remark, that tbe inquiry, when, and under what circumstances, tbe proceedings of inferior courts, are to be regarded as void for want of notice, is unquestionably involved in much obscurity and confusion. But they add, that this difficulty may, in some degree, be obviated, or remedied by remembering that tbe question, when notice shall be presumed, is a very different one from that of tbe effect of a want of notice, when proved or conceded. Webave strongly experienced this obscurity and confusion in examining a [123]*123mass of cases, to ascertain an intelligible rule by which to determine this cause. They se.em, generally, to be decided, each upon its own facts, without much reference to rules; or when such are sometimes given, the mind feels its darkness nearly as much in understanding and applying them, as in groping its way without them. See 10 Peters, 474. In this, and in similar cases, the questions arise, what is a superior, and what an inferior court ? when presumptions attach in its favor ? what is jurisdiction, and when does it attach ? whether notice, or other matter which must appear, may appear by the record of the judgment, or must be shown otherwise ? whether a superior court, acting in a matter, not of common law jurisdiction, but committed to it by statute, is to be regarded as a court of inferior and limited jurisdiction ? or whether those presumptions attach to it, which pertain to a superior court,-and when a court may decide on its own jurisdiction, or how far the decision is conclusive ?

On these questions, it requires a treatise, rather than .an opinion in a cause, to reduce the cases to consistency and a system; and an illustration of what even a laborious treatise can do with the subject, is to be found by comparing the first and last sentences of a paragraph in 1 Smith's Lead. Cases, pp. 832, 833. The first is, that “ whatever may be the rule with regard to courts of general powers, when acting within the scope of those powers, it is well settled that when they do not, and exercise a special and statutory authority, their proceedings stand on the same footing with those of courts of limited and inferior jurisdiction, and will be invalid, unless the authority on which they are founded, has been strictly pursued citing Denning v. Corwin, 11 Wend. 647 ; Jackson v. Esty, 7 Ib. 148 ; Sharp v. Speir, 4 Hill, 16 ; Striker v. Kelly, 7 Ib. 11; Matter of Mount Morris Square, 2 Ib. 14; Williamson v. Berry, 8 How. 495 ; Same v. Ball, 8 Ib. 566; Matter of Flatbush Avenue, 1 Barb.

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