Scarlett v. Robinson

76 A. 181, 112 Md. 202, 1910 Md. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 76 A. 181 (Scarlett v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scarlett v. Robinson, 76 A. 181, 112 Md. 202, 1910 Md. LEXIS 107 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The questions for determination in this case arise upon exceptions by purchasers to the ratification of the sale of certain real estate of George G. Earnandis, late of Harford County, deceased, and the appeal is from the order of the Court below overruling the exceptions and ratifying the sale.

The proceedings for the sale were based upon Article 16, section 129 of the Code of Public General Laws conferring jurisdiction upon Courts of equity to decree the sale of land held by concurrent owners and not susceptible of division without loss or injury to the parties interested. In the bill of complaint it was alleged that Mr. Earnandis died intestate and unmarried seized of the real estate in question situated partly in Harford County and partly in Baltimore City and described by reference to the deeds under which he acquired title; that the property descended to the plaintiffs and defendants named in the bill, nieces and nephews of the decedent, as his only heirs at law; that they hold the title in the undivided proportions respectively inherited and particularly stated; that they are all adults and reside in Baltimore City; and that the property is not susceptible of partition among the parties according to their respective interests without loss and injury. There was a prayer for a decree authorizing a sale and division of the proceeds, and for general relief. Answers were filed by all the defendants admitting the allegations of the bill and consenting to the passage of a decree as prayed. After the filing of a general replication the cause was submitted by agreement of- all the parties, and a decree was thereupon passed. It directed that the lands and premises mentioned in the proceedings be sold, appointed trustees to make the sale, and authorized them, after full compliance by the purchasers, to convey “the property and estate to him, *205 her or them sold, free, clear and discharged from all claims of the parties to this cause.”

In pursuance of this decree the real estate in Baltimore City described in the bill, consisting of several ground rents, was sold by the trustees, and the sales were duly reported. The appellants were purchasers of some of the ground rents, and they excepted separately, but upon identical grounds, to the ratification of the sales.

The first and principal reason assigned in the exceptions was that no testimony had been taken in the cause, and that, therefore, there was nothing to show that the parties claiming to be such were in fact the heirs at law of the intestate and the only persons sustaining that relation. This objection leads to the inquiry whether the absence of evidence affects the validity of the decree when questioned upon exceptions to the ratification of the sale, and if not, whether the omission to take testimony to prove the title renders it unmarketable independently of any question as to the decree.

The statute under which the proceedings were conducted does not, in its present form, require expressly that evidence be adduced to sustain the allegations of the bill. It provides that the Court may decree a partition of any lands on the bill or petition of any concurrent owner, whether claiming by descent or purchase, “or if it appear that said lands cannot be divided without loss or injury to the parties entitled, the Court may decree a sale.” Code, Art. 16, sec. 129!.

In the Act of 1831, Chapter 311, sec. 1, which dealt with the same subject and which has been amended into the form of the existing statute, it was provided that “if upon the bill and answers and evidence taken in the cause, or upon return of a commission ordered by the Court for surveying and ascertaining the premises, it shall appear to the Court that a sale as aforesaid will be most equitable or beneficial for all concerned, said Court may decree a sale accordingly.” * * *

The provision for evidence or a commission, as the alternative means of making it appear to the Court that a sale should be decreed, was eliminated from the statute when it was in *206 eorporated in the Code of 1860, and it has never since been restored.

It is a general rule that admissions obviate the necessity of proof; Miller’s Equity, page 195; and this Court, in discussing proceedings under section 213 of .Article 16 of the Code relating to the sale of property, under certain conditions of title, when it appears to be advantageous to the parties, has recognized the propriety of accepting the admissions of the parties, if all are competent to bind themselevs, as sufficient to establish the jurisdictional averments of the bill. Snook v. Munday, 90 Md. 702; Mewshaw v. Mewshaw, 2 Md. Ch. 13. But it is contended by the appellants that a sale ought not to be authorized by the Court upon the unsworn declarations of parties that they are the real and only owners of the property because of the opportunity for collusion which such a procedure would afford, and that a purchaser is entitled to the additional assurance furnished by the oaths of witnesses that the entire ownership is concluded by the decree. The question we have now to consider, however, is not whether formal proof would have given the purchasers greater confidence in the title, but whether the decree for the sale was validly passed. It it could be vacated at all at the instance of the purchasers, it would have to be upon the theory that the Court which passed it was without jurisdiction for that purpose.

It is well settled in this State that the only ground upon which an exceptant to the ratification of a sale can question the decree under which the sale was made is .that it is void for want of jurisdiction. This rule was clearly stated by Judge McSheery in Hamilton v. Traber, 78 Md. 28, as follows : “If the Court had jurisdiction to pass the decree, any mere irregularity in the proceeding, or defect in the proof, could not be availed of to impeach the decree collaterally This has been repeatedly held by this Court. But if the Court was wholly without jurisdiction to decree the sale of the property in the proceedings then before it, the purchaser may successfully rely upon that want of jurisdiction to avoid *207 the sale, because the decree would, in suoh a case, be an absolute nullity.”

It has also been held that the test of the Court’s jurisdiction in such cases is whether a demurrer would lie to the bill. Tomlinson v. McKaig, 5 Gill, 256; Johnson v. Hoover, 75 Md. 486; Hamilton v. Traber, supra; Slingluff v. Stanley, 66 Md. 225.

In the case last cited Chief Judge Alvey said: “It is the allegations of the bill that confer jurisdiction and determine the power of the Court to decree the sale; and though the proof may be defective, or the decree be passed without proof, that does not affect the question of the jurisdiction of the Court.”

In Newbold v. Schlens, 66 Md.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A. 181, 112 Md. 202, 1910 Md. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scarlett-v-robinson-md-1910.