Smith v. Ryan

134 P.2d 732, 114 Mont. 281
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1943
DocketNo. 8366
StatusPublished

This text of 134 P.2d 732 (Smith v. Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Ryan, 134 P.2d 732, 114 Mont. 281 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

HONORABLE DEAN KING,

District Judge, sitting in place of Justice ANGSTMAN, disqualified, delivered the opinion of the court.

Beneficiaries and successors in interest of beneficiaries under the will of deceased appeal from an order confirming sale of real estate.

In the year 1930 Francis M. Ryan and William M. Carpenter were appointed and qualified as executors of the will of Edward Ryan, deceased. Under the terms of the will, Francis M. Ryan and five other children of the deceased were to share equally in the estate. Since that time Carpenter has conrpletely neglected his duties as executor, and Ryan alone has conducted [283]*283the affairs of the estate. The district court responsible for the supervision of the estate has paid little attention to the provisions of Chapter 122 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and this court, over three years ago, although finding that there was ample cause to remove the executors, refused to do so on the sole grounds that the heirs had acquiesced in the delay and that the estate was in condition to be closed and could be closed within three months if the executors were allowed to proceed. (In re Ryan’s Estate, 109 Mont. 340, 96 Pac. (2d) 916.) If the court had foreseen the present condition, its decision would undoubtedly have been otherwise. We are not, however, expressing any opinion as to whether or not the heirs have contributed to the further delay in closing the estate.

The present appeal is from the order of confirmation of the sale of real estate, based on defects in the notice of sale and disproportion of sale price to value of property. The question directly presented by the appeal is whether the order of confirmation and the sale of the property must be set aside; and the further question presents itself whether the order of sale also should be set aside, or a new sale conducted under it. The general rule is that issues not raised by the briefs will not be considered, but there is precedent for the court, in extraordinary cases, to decide matters not covered by the briefs. (Miller Insurance Agency v. Home Fire Ins., etc., Co., 100 Mont. 551, 560, 51 Pac. (2d) 628; Samuell v. Moore Merc. Co., 62 Mont. 232, 204 Pac. 376.) Out of consideration for the long suffering heirs, we have decided to examine the whole matter, in the hope that a fair price may be obtained for the property, and that there may sometime be an end to these proceedings.

Petition for sale of real estate was filed March 24, 1942. Pursuant to order to show cause issued and published, the order of sale was made and entered April 13. The property was reappraised April 11, by appraisers nominated by the executor. In this appraisement the ranch was properly described, apparently, and was appraised at $15,000. Lots 8 and 9 in Block 9 of Boulder Consolidated were appraised at $50, and another [284]*284piece of property in Boulder at $30. Except for defects in the description, notice of sale was properly given. At the sale on April 28, the ranch property was sold at public auction to Ed Murphy for $9,500. At the hearing on petition for confirmation the attorney for appellants bid $10,500, and Murphy raised his-bid to $10,600. Appellants’ attorney stated that the bid was his own personal bid and that his clients were not interested in it. However, the court refused to accept his statement as true, ruled that his clients were interested in the bid and had thereby-waived their objections to confirmation of the sale, and confirmed the same to Murphy on his increased bid.

In the petition for sale there is no reference whatever to either the condition or value of the estate or to the county in which the land lies, and the inventoried value is not given. It describes, the property as follows:

“Part of W% of Section 15, Twp. 5, Range 3 261 acres
N%SW%; Wy2SEi/4SEy4NEy4; NE%SE}4; less 12 acres account R. R. R. of W. Sec. Twp. 5 Range 3 228
N%; N^SWyt; NW^SE^ less 7 acres right of way, Sec. 21, Twp. 5 Range 3 433
S%Ny>, NWyNEyt; S% less 8 acres right of way, See. 29, Twp. 5 Range 3 512
NEyNEi/4 Section 32 Twp. 5 Range 3 40
NWy^ Section 33, Twp. 5 Range 3 160
SW%SW% Section 28, Twp. 5 Range 3 40
Boulder Consolidated, Lots 8 and 9, Block 9.”

The petition failed to mention the other piece of property in Boulder.

The order of sale, after the simple finding that “it appears the property cannot be divided,” authorizes but does not direct the executor “to sell all the real estate belonging to the estate, either in one parcel or in sub-divisions, as he * * * shall deem, most beneficial to the estate, at public auction * * The land description is approximately the same as in the petition, except that about nine hundred acres of the land are shown as in Range 3 East. There is added the statement that “the lands [285]*285to be sold are known as the Edward Ryan Ranch in Boulder-Valley, Jefferson County, Montana.”

The notice of sale contains practically the same description as the order of sale. The account of sales in the return of sale has the same description except that the lots in Boulder Consolidated are omitted and the land in section 20 is described as “N%SW}4; W%SE%; SE14NE34; NE}4SE%,” etc., and the Range is not designated as either east or west. In the body of the return, however, the explanation is made that the lands-are actually in Range 3 West, that the mistake was the result of a clerical error, and that “the specific description was augmented by a general description reading as follows: ‘The lands to be sold are known as the Edward Ryan Ranch in Boulder Valley, Jefferson County, Montana.’ That as this is the only ranch owned by the estate or in which it has any interest, the description in the order of sale and in the notices of sale would actually describe the lands with common certainty.”

There is nowhere in the record any evidence to the effect that the lands are “known as the Edward Ryan Ranch,” but presumably there was such testimony at the hearing on the order to show cause, for in the order of sale the court found that the lands specifically described in the order, including the-Boulder town lots, several miles away from the farm land, were known as the Edward Ryan Ranch.

The order confirming sale describes the property as in Range 3 West, and otherwise contains the same description as the-account of sales in the return- — that is, the lands are correctly-described except as to the lack of any description of those in the west half of Section 15. It omits the property in Boulder and in the east half of Section 15.

The most serious errors are the omission in the petition to state the condition or value of the estate, the description in the papers leading up to the sale of the lands as in Range 3 East, instead of West, the description of the West Half of the Southeast Quarter and the Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter in Section 20 (comprising 120 acres) as “W^SE1/^ [286]*286.SE14NE14” (comprising 5 acres) in all papers np to the return, and the failure to properly describe the land in Section 15 •anywhere in the record. The inventory describes this land by metes and bounds, and gives the acreage at 271 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P.2d 732, 114 Mont. 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-ryan-mont-1943.