O'Conner v. Carver
O'Conner v. Carver
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This bill is filed to set aside, as constituting a cloud upon complainant’s title, a sale of land made under the decree of the County Court of Shelby County in 1858. It appears that the complainant is the only surviving heir of her father, Edward O’Conner, who died in Shelby County in 1855, leaving also another child, a daughter named Margaret, who has since died intestate and unmarried. James O’Conner was appointed as the administrator of the estate, who, on the 28th of February, 1857, filed a petition for the sale of the lots in controversy, for the . payment of the debts of his intestate, and for money advanced by him in discharging what are claimed to have been liabilities of the estate.
It is now insisted that this sale was void for several reasons, some of which we proceed to notice. •
First, it is insisted that the two minor children, one being the present complainant, were not parties to the proceeding, and that the decree, therefore, was not binding force upon them.
It appears from the petition that it was filed by James O’Conner, administrator, and Jane and Margaret O’Conner, appearing by their next friend, James O’Conner.
Does this make the minors parties to the proceeding?
In the case of Elrod v. Lancaster, 2 Head, 574, it was held that an executor against whom a bill had •been filed involving an account of his executorship,
This, too, was an attack upon the decree where it came before the court collaterally, and not on appeal or writ of error.
In the case of Frazier and Tullos, Ex’rs, v. Pankey, 1 Swan, 75, the statement of the bill was, that it was filed by themselves as personal representatives as well as on behalf of the widow and minor children, naming them. This was a bill filed for the sale of real estate in a ease of insolvency, under the act of 1837-8, requiring the heirs of the deceased to be made parties. This was held not to make them parties; and while the court say, in so holding, that the bill does, not purport to make them parties, and that the personal representatives alone speak, and say they act on behalf of the heirs, yet we think that the language and plain meaning of the bill were, that the personal representatives brought the suit for themselves and also, on behalf of the minors, just as a minor in ordinary oases brings his suit' by another as his next friend.. We can see no sound distinction between that case and this, where the suit is by James O’Conner as-administrator, and Jane and Margaret O’Conner, who-
The facts appear on the face of the proceeding, and show that the infants were not parties thereto. They are, therefore, not bound by the decree.
We confine this opinion to the precise case as made in the record before us.
The next question presented in the case, and the one on which the Chancellor rendered his decree against the complainant, is, that after her majority the sale was ratified by the complainant by receiving the proceeds of it remaining in his hands. The facts on this point, as proved by the deposition of the complainant taken on her own behalf, are as follow: She says she first learned the facts, as to the settlement of her father’s estate through her counsel, Mr. Hanson, a year, or perhaps a little more, before the date of her deposition, — January 21, 1871, — say about January 1, 1870. She had a settlement with her guardian of his accounts as such after her majority. She says that negotiations for a settlement commenced about two weeks after she arrived at age (which was in November, 1869), and ended, the settlement being made sometime afterward, to use her own language.
Now from all this, in connection with other facts shown by her, we infer that she claimed to hold her guardian to a strict accountability for his guardianship, and that he paid her the one thousand dollars in consideration that she should accept what had been done for her during her minority, — this sum being about the surplus arising from the sales after payment of debts; and that this was done by her in ratification of his acts in reference to her property.
In fact, as far as we can gather from the scanty
We therefore affirm the Chancellor’s decree, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.