Grieger v. Meinke

272 N.W. 779, 199 Minn. 511, 111 A.L.R. 1357, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 702
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 23, 1937
DocketNos. 31,132, 31,133
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 779 (Grieger v. Meinke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grieger v. Meinke, 272 N.W. 779, 199 Minn. 511, 111 A.L.R. 1357, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 702 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Gallagher, Chief Justice.

Frederick Sprain, a resident of Rice county, this state, died intestate on November 5, 1933, survived by his Avidow, Wilhelmine Sprain, and two daughters, Paulina Meinke and Amanda L. Grieger, the latter one of the appellants herein.

On December 18, 1933, letters of administration were issued by the probate court to William H. Meinke, husband of the above named Paulina Meinke. Thereafter he duly qualified as such administrator. On March 19, 1931, the said William H. Meinke, as administrator, filed in the probate court of Rice county a petition for license to sell certain real estate belonging to decedent at the time of his death, being the real estate involved herein. A hearing was had upon said petition, pursuant to notice duly given, on April 16, 1931, on Avhich date the probate court issued an order duly licensing and authorizing the representative of the estate to sell the real estate referred to in the petition at private sale. Subsequent to the issuance and filing of said order of license the representative filed his oath and bond as required by Iuav, and the bond was duly approved by the probate court. He also caused the real estate to be appraised by appraisers appointed by the court. The appraised value was fixed at the sum of $8,500.

On June 30, 1931, William H. Meinke, as representative, filed in the probate court of said county a report of sale. This report showed that he had made sale of said real estate to Wilhelmine Sprain and Paulina Meinke, as joint tenants, for the sum of $8,500. Wilhelmine Sprain was the surviving wife of the decedent, Frederick Sprain, and Paulina Meinke is the wife of William H. Meinke, the administrator. On the same day the probate court made its order [513]*513confirming the sale and directing the representative to execute and deliver to the purchasers a good and sufficient deed of conveyance upon their complying with the conditions of said sale. The representative on the same day executed to the purchasers an administrator’s deed purporting to convey to them the involved premises.

It appears that in' 1930 decedent advanced to his daughter Amanda $2,500 in cash and guaranteed to one John Tupa the payment of her note in the further sum of $3,000. Amanda thereupon gave to decedent her note for $5,500, which note was in existence at the time of decedent’s death and was inventoried as an asset in his estate. The note for $3,000 in favor of John Tupa which decedent signed for his daughter Amanda was filed and allowed as a claim against his estate. It also appears that subsequent to the sale the purchasers executed to John Tupa a mortgage on the land in question.

On July 7, 1934, the representative of the estate filed a petition in probate court which recited among other things that decedent during his lifetime had advanced to his daughter Amanda sums of money aggregating $5,500; that said sums so advanced exceeded the share of the said Amanda in decedent’s estate; asked that the note of the said Amanda for $5,500 be treated as an advancement instead of an asset of said estate; and petitioned that it be determined that the said Amanda Avas not to receive anything further from the estate as an heir. On the same day Amanda executed and filed an acknowledgment of such advancement and requested that the petition of the representative be granted. By separate instrument the purchasers of the real estate, Wilhelmine Sprain and Paulina Meinke, consented to the granting of such petition. On July 23, 1934, said Amanda, by another separate instrument, attempted to withdraw the previous petition and consent, but no action was ever taken thereon, nor does the record disclose that any action Avas taken by the probate court on the petition of the administrator to declare the note given by Amanda, hereinbefore referred to, as an advancement.

Amanda and her husband were also indebted to the State Bank of Webster upon a separate note. On November 17, 1933, the com[514]*514mission er of banks, as statutory liquidator thereof, brought suit on this note against the makers and obtained a default judgment. This judgment rendered in the district court of Rice county December 9, 1933, was in the sum of $3,643.82. It was docketed in the district court of Scott county on December 14, 1933, subsequent to which an execution was issued, and an undivided one-third interest in the real estate was leviedoupon by the sheriff of Scott county, as the property of said Amanda.

On April 27, 1934, this interest ivas sold under execution sale to State Bank of Webster, and a certificate of sale was duly issued by the sheriff to the bank subject to the right of redemption. There was no redemption from the execution sale. On July 24, 1934, and subsequent to the execution of the administrator’s deed to the purchasers, the commissioner of banks, as liquidator of the State Bank of Webster, appealed to the district court of Rice county from the order confirming the sale.

On July 28, 1934, Amanda petitioned the probate court of Rice county for an order vacating the order confirming such sale. On December 3, 1934, the probate court filed an order denying her petition. From this order Amanda appealed to the district court of Rice county.

The two appeals were consolidated and heard as, one case. Most of the facts were stipulated by the parties, and the orders appealed from in both instances were affirmed by the district court. From the respective orders denying appellants’ motions for a new trial these appeals were taken.

Each appellant contends that the sale of the real estate in question to Paulina Meinke was in violation of 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 8847, and therefore void. In view of the conclusion the court has reached, it is unnecessary to determine which appellant has a right to prosecute this appeal or to consider the effect of the sale insofar as the rights oPWilhelmine Sprain therein are concerned.

The first question presented in the case has to do with whether the sale insofar as it was made by the administrator to his wife was void or voidable. 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 8847, reads as follows:

[515]*515“No representative making the sale shall djrectly or indirectly purchase or be interested in the purchase of any part of the real estate so sold, and all sales made contrary to the provisions of this section shall be void.”

Our court in the early case of White v. Iselin, 26 Minn. 487, 493, 5 N. W. 359, 364, thoroughly considered the effect of the terms “void” and “voidable” in construing a statute practically identical with § 8847, and reached the following conclusion:

“We think the word ‘void’ in this statute was used in the sense of voidable, and the sales prohibited are void, as they were void before — that is, at the election, timely exercised, of those interested in the land sold. Such election could not be exercised against a tona-fide purchaser.”

Here we have, at least as far as the record in this case is concerned, one tona fide purchaser, as there is nothing in the record that would justify a finding to the effect that the sale, insofar as it was made to Wilhelmine Sprain, was not tona fide. Fraud could not be inferred as to her. Cain v. McGeenty, 41 Minn. 194, 42 N. W. 933.

At common law a sale by an administrator to himself was not void but voidable at the election of the heirs. Baldwin v. Allison, 4 Minn. 11 (25); Michoud v. Girod, 4 How. (U. S.) 503, 11 L. ed. 1076; Davoue v. Fanning, 2 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 252.

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Related

Severson v. Engbarth
135 N.W.2d 205 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1965)
Tognazzini v. Tognazzini
271 P.2d 77 (California Court of Appeal, 1954)
In Re Estate of Fiske
291 N.W. 289 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1940)
In Re Estate of Sprain
272 N.W. 779 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 N.W. 779, 199 Minn. 511, 111 A.L.R. 1357, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grieger-v-meinke-minn-1937.