Sumner v. . Sessoms

94 N.C. 371
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 94 N.C. 371 (Sumner v. . Sessoms) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sumner v. . Sessoms, 94 N.C. 371 (N.C. 1886).

Opinion

SitlTM, C. J.,

(after stating the facts). 1 Exception. The plaintiffs proposed to show that the land was worth much more *374 than the sum for which it sold at the administrator’s sale, with the view of impeaching the deeds referred to, and setting them aside..

This objection was made, on the ground that the parties to-those deeds were not before the Court, and also because their validity could not be collaterally assailed, as proposed in this action. The objection was sustained, and the testimony for such purpose refused.

We concur in this ruling, and for the reason last assigned for the exclusion of the evidence. So long as the decretal orders of sale and conveyance remain unmodified, the conveyance authorized must also stand, unless impeached themselves in some direct proceeding, imputing collusion or fraud.

The insufficiency of price would have furnished cause for refusing to confirm the reported sale, but not after an adjudication that the “ land brought a fair price, and all parties acquiesced in the sale,” for setting the sale aside, and annulling the deed therefor in an action to establish a legal title, as if they did not exist.

Nor was it competent, in connection with the fact' that Celia Jones, the reputed purchaser, a little more than a month after-wards, made a conveyance of the land to the administrator, Calvin, at a small reduction in price. If the nullity of the purchase could be proved in this collateral proceeding, the evidence would have been competent to be heard, as tending to show collusion in the sale, in connection with other facts, but without their support, it would have been of the feeblest kind. Eor how does the sale and resale a month later, tend, with any convincing force, to establish the fact that the conveyances are the developments of a preconcerted arrangement among the three persons participating in the transaction, to secure the property to the administrator making the sale. And if such collusion did exist and could be shown, the deeds would not be rendered void at law, and the legal title would nevertheless pass, subject to the right of the owner, and of creditors, to repudiate them, and to charge the administrator with an attaching trust. The intervening agency would give the conveyances the forms of law, and he *375 might-be held to abide by the consequences of his own act, un-repudiated by those on whom alone devolved the right to make the election. It would be otherwise but for such agency, for as there must be two independaut parties to a contract, he could make none with himself; and as there could be no sale, there could be no deed, and the bidding off would, in such case, be a nullity.

Such is not the legal result when 'an intermediate person receives and then reconveys the legal estate.

“It is an inflexible rule,’, remarks PearsoN, J., in Patton v. Thompson, 2 Jones’s Eq., 285, “that when a trustee buys at his own sale, even though he gives a fair price, the cestui que trust has his election to treat the sale as a nullity, not because there is, but because there may be fraud.”

“His Honor was mistaken,” is the language used by BoydeN, J., in Simmons v. Hassell, 68 N. C., 213, “in holding that the sale of the Clerk and Master could be attacked in this collateral way. This is an action’ of ejectment, under our old system, brought to try the legal title, and not any equitable claim to the premises. The deed of the Clerk and Master passed the legal title to the purchaser, and this title can only be attacked by some proceeding in the nature of a bill in equity, and not by an action of ejectment.”

So, in the recent case of Froneberger v. Lewis, 79 N. C., 426, where in the opinion the subject is carefully considered, and the previous adjudications examined, Reade, J., thus speaks: “That a trustee or other fiduciary cannot purchase at his own sale, is an iron rule at law, nor indeed can any one else, because in every sale there must of necessity be two persons — a vendor and a vendee. It is equally true, that when there are two persons, a vendor and a vendee, as when a second person is substituted to sell or buy, the sale is valid at law, but in equity the substitution of a second person makes no difference, the validity or invalidity of the sale being determined by other consideration.”

*376 II Exception. The plaintiff also insists that the feme plaintiff was no party to the proceeding to make sale of the intestate’s land, and such sale did not divest her estate in the land claimed in the complaint.

The proposition involved in this objection, has been considered in Hare v. Holloman, decided at the present Term, rendering little more necessary to be said on the subject in addition.

The only complaint of the action of the Court in licensing the sale and directing title to be made pursuant to its terms, proceeds from the plaintiffs, while the other heirs are passive and acquiesce in what was done. A guardian ad litem was appointed for the infant defendant, whose acceptance and presence in Court must be assumed, in the absence of any indication in the record to the contrary, from the fact that the Court took jurisdiction of the cause and rendered judgment. It is true the record produced does not show that notice was served on the infant, or upon her guardian ad litem, nor does the contrary appear in the record, which, so far as we have it, is silent on the point. The jurisdiction is presumed to have been acquired by the exercise of it, and if not, the judgment must stand, and cannot be treated as a nullity, until so declared in some impeaching proceeding, instituted and directed to that end.

The irregularity, if such there be, may, in this mode, be such as to warrant a judgment declaring it null, but it remains in force till this is done. The voluntary appearance of counsel in a cause, dispenses with the service of process upon his adult client. The presence of a next friend or guardian ad litem to represent an infant party, as the case may be, and his recognition by the Court, in proceeding with the cause, precludes an inquiry into his authority in a collateral proceeding, and requires remedial relief to be sought in the manner suggested, wherein the true facts may be ascertained. This method of procedure, so essential to the security of titles dependent upon a trust in the integrity and force of judicial action, taken in the sphere of its jurisdiction, is recognized in White v. Albertson, 3 Dev., 241; *377 Skinner v. Moore, 2 D. & B., 138; Keaton v. Banks, 10 Ired., 384, and numerous other cases, some of which are referred to in Mare v. Holloman, supra,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

County of Franklin v. Jones
95 S.E.2d 863 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1957)
Downing v. . White
188 S.E. 815 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1936)
Fowler v. . Fowler
130 S.E. 315 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1925)
Starnes v. . Thompson
92 S.E. 259 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1917)
Banks v. Lane
171 N.C. 505 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1916)
Brown v. . Harding
86 S.E. 1010 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1915)
Pinnell v. . Burroughs
84 S.E. 364 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1915)
Harris v. . Bennett
76 S.E. 217 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1912)
Phillips v. . Denton
73 S.E. 1006 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1912)
Patillo v. . Lytle
73 S.E. 200 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1911)
Simmons v. Defiance Box Co.
62 S.E. 435 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1908)
Rackley v. . Roberts
60 S.E. 975 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1908)
Smathers v. . Sprouse
57 S.E. 392 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1907)
Murray v. . Southerland
34 S.E. 270 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1899)
Abbott Ex Rel. Abbott v. Hancock
31 S.E. 268 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1898)
Russell v. . Roberts
28 S.E. 406 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1897)
Harrison v. . Hargrove
26 S.E. 936 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1897)
Seybold v. Grand Forks National Bank
67 N.W. 682 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1896)
Smith v. . Gray
21 S.E. 200 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1895)
Sledge v. . Elliott
21 S.E. 797 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 N.C. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sumner-v-sessoms-nc-1886.