Harrison v. Hord

51 Ky. 471, 12 B. Mon. 471, 1851 Ky. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 1, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Ky. 471 (Harrison v. Hord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Hord, 51 Ky. 471, 12 B. Mon. 471, 1851 Ky. LEXIS 99 (Ky. Ct. App. 1851).

Opinion

Judge Hise

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Wm. Hord, the defendant in the action in the lower Court, claims title to a tract of land by virtue of his purchase thereof at a Commissioner’s sale, made on the 20th of November, 1829, in pursuance of a decree rendered on the 9th of October, 1829, upon the joint petition o'l the adult heirs of Indiana Robinson, deceased, and the guardians of her infant heirs, for the sale of a tract of land descended to them. Hord, after his purchase, received a deed from the commissioner, dated the 6th of July, 1831, and the commissioner reported his sale and deed to Hord, on the 9th of July, 1831, when the Court approved the sale and conveyance as made, and ordered the report and deed to be recorded.

Hord, after his purchase, took possession of the land, and has so continued in possession thereof in person or by his tenants from 1829, until the institution of this suit, in April, 1848, a period of about nineteen years.

Wm. B. Harrison as the guardian of his then infant son, Wm. B. Harrison, jr., joined in the petition for the sale of the land, to 2 9ths of which, the infant was entitled by descent from Indiana Robinson.

This party, Wm. B. Harrison, after he had arrived to the age of 29 years, as lessor of the plaintiff, instituted this suit in ejectment against Hord’s tenant, to recover 2-9ths of the land, the whole of which had been sold and conveyed to Hord as above stated.

The lessor of the plaintiff, Harrison, contends that the decree and subsequent proceedings under it are void, and that his right and title to his share of 2-9th* »f the land were not thereby divested.

Grounds relied upon for rever-án!. As ageneral rule a purchase at a decretal sale made by a Court of competent jurisdiction is valid until reversed unless the decree be void: (4 Dana 438,7 lb. 483, 7 B. Mon. 62 8 lb. 106.)

Ilord relies for defense upon the title acquired as above stated.

The facts as agreed by the parties in writing, and as shown by the record of the proceedings in the suit, by petition for the sale of the land descended from Indiana Robinson, above referred to, and the law arising thereupon, were all submitted to the Court for adjudication without the intervention of a jury, and a judgment was rendered in favor of Hord, the defendant. Harrison has appealed to this Court, and asks a reversal of the judgment, and assigns for error, that the decree, commissioner’s sale, and deed, under which defendant claims to have obtained the plaintiff’s title, are all null and void, because,

1st. There was no such bond executed by any guardian, as thestatute requires, either before or after the sale was ordered and decreed by the Court.

2d. That Wm. B. Harrison, the father of the plaintiff, as his guardian, filed the petition in his own name, and not in the name of the infant, (the present plaintiff,) and that having died on the 27th of December, 1829, before the time when the commissioner executed the deed to Plord, and before the sale and conveyance was reported by him, and approved and confirmed by the Court, that in consequence, the suit abated, and as the plaintiff was not then a party himself, and as his father who had petitioned for him as his guardian, was dead, there was no case in Court; and that hence all the proceedings in said suit under which defendant attempts to establish his title to the land in contest, are absolutely null and void.

It may be well to remark that as the defendant holds by purchase under a judicial or decretal sale, that as a general rule, no irregularity or error, unless it be of such character as would make the decree absolutely void can defeat the right thus acquired by the purchaser. If the decree be not void, but erroneous merely, and reversable, a fair sale of land made by an officer of the Court, by authority thei’eof, will be valid, and a title [473]*473thus acquired will not be disturbed even though the decree itself should be reversed. The cases of Bustard vs Gates and wife, (4 Dana, 438:) Singleton vs Cogar, (7 Dana, 483,) Lampton vs Usher's heirs, 7 B. Monroe, 62,) and Benningfield, &c., vs Reed, &c., (8. B Monroe 104,) furnish ample authority to sustain the position assumed.

A sale of infant* real estate is not void though the bond reauired by the statute: (2 Stat. Law 808,) should be delect ive in form or in substance.

If the bond required by the statute which authorizes the sale of infants’ real estate (2d Statute Law, 808,) should be defective in form or in substance, or if no such bond shall have been given at all, the jurisdiction of the Court is not on that account defeated, and a decree rendered directing the sale of the infants’ land would on that account be merely erroneous, but not void, and even its reversal for such error would not generally deprive the purchaser of his right to the land, and if unreversed it is binding and effective between the parties, and cannot be collaterally questioned in another suit between the infants and the purchaser of the land, or those holding under him, so as to over-1reach in that way, the title acquired by purchase at a public judicial sale. The decree directing the sale of the land in contest in this suit, if admitted to be irregular and erroneous for want of a sufficient bond, is not void, and has not been reversed, and is now irreversible ; an appeal or writ of error is barred by lapse of time. The decree was rendered in 1829, and the plaintiff, as shown by the agreed case, was 29 years old when the suit was instituted. If the bond in this case be defective, however, for the reasons assigned, yet where it is attempted to impeach this unreversed decree, collaterally, in the suit under consideration, to recover back the land purchased under it by the defendant, at a fair, open, public sale, and as presumed, at a fair price, such defects in the bond may be properly considered to have been waived and cured because the fact is agreed that the whole amount of the put chase money for the land due to the plaintiff was paid by the defendant .to the commissioners, who paid it over to [474]*474the plaintiff’s guardian, from whom he, the plaintiff, received'the money with all interest accrued thereon, after he arrived at 21 years of age. A defective bond or the absence of any bond at all, has not operated to the prejudice of the plaintiff in the least. He has received the whole amount due him, voluntarily, at mature age, and now appears in this case in the unenviable attitude of claiming the land of a bona.fide purchaser thereof, for a fair price, whilst he has in his pocket 'the price in money paid for it, and fails to refund or offer to refund it. It is not deemed necessary therefore, to decide whether the bond in question is defective in form or substance, because,

Where a judicial sale of infants lands had been ordered and made 28 years, and all the purchase money paid and possess ion held from the sale — held that no irregularity in the sale would be available in an action of ejectment by the heir.

1st. If it was, the decree rendered would not on •that account be void, or defendant’s right destroyed.

2d.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Ky. 471, 12 B. Mon. 471, 1851 Ky. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-hord-kyctapp-1851.