Lee v. Page

75 Ky. 202, 12 Bush 202, 1876 Ky. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 19, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 Ky. 202 (Lee v. Page) 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
Lee v. Page, 75 Ky. 202, 12 Bush 202, 1876 Ky. LEXIS 63 (Ky. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE PETERS

delivered the opinion oe the court.

This action was brought by appellees against appellant to recover a tract of land in his possession, situate in Webster County, which they claim was devised by the late Robert Curry to his son, James Curry, for life, remainder to his four daughters (the appellees), Mrs. S. M. Page, Mrs. Nannie Gist, Mrs. Mary Gist, and Miss Laura Curry.

The derivation of title, as set out in the petition, is admitted in the answer of appellant; but he alleges that James Curry, the life-tenant, died in 1865 intestate, leaving his four daughters, infants under twenty-one years, of age, and prior to January, 1868, H. H. Smith was appointed their statutory guardian by the Webster County Court; that in the last-named month and year a petition was filed in the proper court, in the name of said infants, by Smith, their statutory guardian, for a sale of the land devised to them by their grandfather, being about three hundred and eleven acres; and in their petition it was alleged that they had no other estate; that the rents and profits arising from the land were inadequate to the maintenance and education of said infants, and that a sale of it would be greatly to their advantage; and a sale was prayed for.

Appellant further alleges that the land, under an order of court, was surveyed, and divided into two lots; and the court adjudged a sale thereof in two parcels; and that he became the purchaser of lot “No, 1,” containing one hundred and [204]*204seventy-six acres, being the same for which he is now sued, at the price of $880.76, all of which he paid to Smith, guardian as aforesaid, after the sale had been approved and confirmed by the court ; and that Smith had accounted for and paid over to his said wards and their husbands every dollar for which the land sold. He prays that in case it should be adjudged that he did not acquire the title to the land by his purchase as aforesaid, that he should have the price he paid for it refunded to him, and that he be paid for valuable and lasting improvements put on the land by him since his purchase; and to that end he made his answer a cross-petition against appellees, and asked for a transfer of the cause to the equity docket.

The transfer was made, and appellees demurred to the answer. Their demurrer was sustained; and appellant having declined to answer further, the cause was submitted on final hearing, and the court adjudged that the decree of the Webster Common Pleas Court rendered at its term, 1868,. in the case of James Curry’s heirs, ex parte, decreeing and directing a sale of the infants’ land, was absolutely void, and that said sale, and the commissioner’s deed thereunder, passed no title to the purchaser, and adjudged the land in possession of appellant to appellees; and from that judgment he has appealed.

It is insisted by counsel for appellees that the sale was void —-first, because the statute regulating the sale of infants’ real estate required that the court should appoint three commissioners, who should report, among other things, whether the interest of the infants required the sale to be made.

Article 3, chapter 86, Revised Statutes, page 592, required that before a court should have jurisdiction to decree a sale of infants’ real estate — 1. Three commissioners should be appointed to report, and must report under oath to the court the net value of the infant’s real and personal estate, and the annual profits thereof, and whether the interest of the infant or idiot required the sale to be made.

[205]*205In construing this section of the statute, in Wells v. Cowherd’s heirs (2 Metcalfe, 514), this court said: “The only legitimate inquiry with us is, have the plain requirements of the statute, which protects and guards the rights of infants by a strict limitation of the jurisdiction of the courts over their property, been complied with ? If not, then, in the language of the statute, 'any decree, sale, or conveyance thereof shall be void,’ and must be so pronounced, however inconvenient or disastrous the consequences to particular individuals.”

In that case neither the report.of the commissioners nor the bond of the guardian came up to the requirements of the statute, and the proceeding was by rule against the purchaser of the land to compel him to pay the purchase-money; and this court directed the rule to be dischai’ged. In this case the language of the learned judge who delivered the opinion is broader and more comprehensive than that of the statute itself.

In Bell v. Clark (2 Met. 573), which was a proceeding by the purchaser at a sale of infants’ real estate to quash the sale, this court held that the report of the commissioners was insufficient ; and that being the case, the court had no jurisdiction to decree the sale of the land, and ordered the same to be quashed.

In Mattingly’s heirs v. Read (3 Met. 524), which was also a proceeding to set aside a sale of infants’ real estate by Read, one of the purchasers, the sale was set aside by the court for the non-conformity of the report of the commissioners to the requirements of the statute.

In Woodcock, &c. v. Bowman, &c. (4 Met. 40), a proceeding by the purchaser to set aside the sale of infants’ real estate, because the commissioners’ report and the bond of the guardian were insufficient, the sale was set aside, because the commissioners failed to report the net value of the infants’ real and personal estate and the annual profits thereof; but the bond, although informal in some respects, was held to be sufficient.

[206]*206In Watts, &c. v. Pond, &c. (4 Met. 61), the sale of infants' real estate was quashed, on motion of the purchaser, because the report of the commissioners did not conform to the requirements of the statute.

But in Thornton, &c. v. McGrath, &c. (1 Duvall, 349), this court carefully considered and reviewed the preceding adjudications, with the view to ascertain the meaning attached by the court and the legislature to the word “void.” After discussing the question at some length, the court says these decisions embrace only two classes of cases — -first, those in which the purchaser sought a cancellation of his bonds, because a good title could not be assured by infants not concluded by a voidable sale; and, second, those in which the infants sought relief against the sale, claiming, rightfully, to avoid it or have it declared void. To sustain these decisions it was immaterial whether the sales were void or voidable.

The court also said the common law pronounces a certain class of deeds by infants “void;” but still it will be admitted that no such deed could be treated as void under all circumstances by the infant, and especially by the other and adult party to it. In that class of cases, as in many other’s, “void” and “voidable” are used indiscriminately by legislators and jurists without regard to their true contra-distinctive imports; and such is peculiarly the “misuse” of the term “void” when applied to the contracts of infants.

Infants may be sufficiently protected by declaring their contracts voidable at their own election; and to make them void, in the true sense of the word as to both parties, might frustrate the object of their protection, and pervert an intended blessing into a curse to them by depriving them of the profits of beneficial contracts.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ky. 202, 12 Bush 202, 1876 Ky. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-page-kyctapp-1876.