Jones v. McKenna
Jones v. McKenna
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 31st of July, 1865, Thomas Jones sold and conveyed to Sarah J. Jones, then the wife of Samuel H. Jones, the land in controversy in' this case, reciting the consideration and the notes given therefor, five of which, for various amounts, aggregating over $5,000, were made payable to third persons named, and expressly retaining a lien on the land for the payment of the purchase money.
The deed conveyed the land to “Mrs. Sarah J. Jones upon the trusts and limitations hereinafter mentioned, * * * to have and to hold the same to the said Sarah J. Jones for life, for the separate use and benefit of herself and children, and at her death to go to her children,' or the issue of such child or children as may then be dead.” The deed concludes-: ^ “ Should it become necessary to make sale of said land in the opinion of Mrs. Jones for any reason satisfactory to herself, she is expressly empowered to sell the same and make title to the purchaser, but the proceeds are to be invested by her in other lands upon the trusts expressed in the deed.
On the 13th of August, 1867, J. C. P. Hammond, as the personal representative of one of the third persons to whom a purchase note was made payable, and the personal representatives of another of these persons, filed their bill against Samuel H.
To this bill the holder of another of the notes was permitted to become a party complainant, and such proceedings were had that the amount due upon these demands severally was declared, and the land was ordered to be sold in satisfaction, thereof.
At the sale made under this decree, Kobert Mc-Kenna became the purchaser at $7,200, and the money was paid into court, and paid out under its orders. There seems to have been a .small surplus of about $172, after paying such debts as were decreed to be liens on the land, and this surplus was paid to McKenna upon a debt of Sarah J. Jones to him, which, by consent of her counsel, seems to have been declared also to be a lien, although not one of the notes mentioned in the deed. The lien debt proper seems to have been a little over $5,000.
Previous to the sale under the decree, an agreement was entered into by McKenna, afterwards reduced to writing and signed by him, by which, after reciting the sale and that the purchase was made for the payment of the lien debts proper, and also of a debt to a third person named, contracted upon the faith of. Mrs. Jones’ separate estate, and another debt due from her to him for about $1,300, “it was agreed by and between said Sarah J. Jones and said McKenna, that the said
The interest not having been promptly paid under this agreement, McKenna obtained a writ of assistance to put him in possession of the land, and, on the 1st of March, 1873, Samuel H. Jones and Sarah J., his wife, filed their bill, enjoining the execution of said writ, setting out the agreement with McKenna, who is made a defendant, claiming that the purchase in accordance therewith created a mortgage, and asking that it be so decreed, and also decreed that complainant, Sarah J,,, has the right to redeem.
Pending this suit, on the 26th of December, 1873, Sarah J. Jones died. On the 30th of April, 1874, her death was suggested and admitted, and the suit revived, on motion, in the names of her children and heirs by Samuel H. Jones, their father and next friend, they being infants.
The cause was heard on the 24th of June, 1874, when the Chancellor decreed that' the agree
Under this decree the land was sold, and Mc-Kenna became the purchaser at $8,000. On the 20th of November, 1874, the sale was confirmed, the title vested in . McKenna and a writ of possession ordered to put him in possession of the land.
On the 12th of Eebruary, 1875, the motion was taken up and heard, and the Court vacated and annulled the decree of the 20th of November, 1874.
The decree then rendered proceeds: “And the Court being of the opinion that upon the death of Mrs. Sarah J. Jones, the subject matter involved in this cause ceased to exist, and that the cause ought then to have abated, and in law did abate, it is ordered that this cause do abate.”
A bill of exceptions shows that on the hearing of this motion the affidavit of G-eorge C. Holmes was read by the children of Sarah J. Jones. No affidavit appears in the record, and the Clerk states that it was lost before enrollment. Erom this decree McKenna appealed.
On the 4th of August, 1875, Robert McKenna filed his bill against Samuel H. Jones, stating the foregoing facts, claiming the absolute title to the land by virtue of the proceedings in said causes? and asking that the bill be taken as a bill to quiet his title, and to remove the claim of the defendants as a cloud thereon. But if mistaken in his rights in this regard, that he be subrogated to the rights of the lien creditors whose debts
Such proceedings were had in this cause that a final ■ decree wa.s rendered in favor of the complainant, the Court being of opinion that he acquired a good title to the land under his original purchase.
From this decree the defendants appealed.
The two eases of Jones v. McKenna and McKenna v. Jones are now before us separately, but have been heard and argued together. The stress of the argument submitted has been directed to the discussion of the validity ot the title acquired under the sale in the Hammond case, the question turning upon the point whether Sarah J. Jones, as trustee and mother, so represented the interest of her children in the land as to make the decree binding on the children, who were no parties to the suit. The point is one of some nicety. For, while the general rule undoubtedly is, that in foreclosure suits the beneficiaries, as well as the trustees should be made parties, ( Osbourn v. Fallows, 1 R. & M., 741; Calverley v. Phelp, 6 Mad., 229; Clark v. Reyburn, 8 Wall, 318), yet it has equally been the rule that a trustee may be invested with such powers as to make him the representative of the beneficiaries in all things relating to the trust property: Bifield v. Taylor, 1 Beat., 91; Kerrison v. Stewart, 93 U. S., 160; Sweet v. Parker, 7 C. E. Green, 453. And it is difficult to conceive of
Upon a critical examination of the record we find it impossible to decide the point in one of the eases, and unnecessary in the other. The bill of Jones and wife v. McKenna was filed to enjoin the execution of a writ of possession under the sale in the first case, and for relief upon the ground that at the sale there was an agreement, subsequently reduced to writing, by which McKen-na agreed to purchase and hold the property in mortgage, subject to redemption upon long time. McKenna admitted the agreement, but insisted that it was only a concession of the right to repurchase on certain terms. The mother died, and the suit was revived in the name of the children, and proceeded to a decree. In that decree, although the Court construed the contract as contended for by the defendant, yet the defendant-waived the decision in his favor and agreed that the agreement might be treated as a mortgage, for the purposes of that suit, upon condition of an immediate sale, aud, thereupon, by consent of parties, a final decree was rendered ascertaining McKenna’s debt, and ordering a sale. The sale was made
The record ■ discloses no ground for this action of the learned Chancellor.
The sale seems to have been in strict conformity with the decree under which it was made and the confirmation proper.
As long as the decree of the former term remained in full force, it was the duty of the Court to execute it. Having been rendered at a previous term the Chancellor had no power over it. His Honor seems to have thought that because the agreement, on which the suit was based, was, in his opinion, a contract for a strict right to repurchase not complied with, the suit necessarily abated. But in this he was clearly mistaken.
The children had the right to revive the suit to test that question precisely as they would have had the right to have exhibited a bill upon the agreement itself, if their mother had died before commencing a suit upon it. And if the Chancellor made a decree adverse to their rights, they had the option to appeal to this Court, and we might have- differed with him in the construction of the contract, or, as was done, compromise the litigation by entering into a consent decree: Wall v. Bushby, 1 Bro. C. C. 484.
That decree having been sanctioned by the
Under tbe Code, Sec. 2855, a suit may be revived in tbe name of infants by their next friend, by motion, in the same way as it might be revived by bill of revivor by next friend. If any of them were of age, the fact does not appear in tbe reeord> of that case, nor, if it did, would tbe form of the entry of revivor affect its validity if tbe adult children did in fact appear and consent to tbe final decree. As the record- comes before us, tbe Chancellor erred in setting aside the decree of confirmation, and bis order in that regard must be reversed and tbe decree of confirmation affirmed with costs.
In this view, if McKenna elects to take the decree suggested, the final decree in the case of Mc-Kenna v. Jones, which is based on the validity of the sale in the Hammond case, must be reversed,, and a decree rendered here in his favor based upon the consent decree in the case of Jones v. Mc-Kenna. Eor McKenna has, in his bill, set out
In the order of revivor as it appeal’s in the record of the case of Jones v. McKenna, the name of one of the children does not appear. It may oe, too, that some of the children were then of age, and did not authorize the revivor. No authority was necessary from the infants; any person, and certainly their father, acting in good faith, might revive for them. But what ground might be shown by the original bill for setting • aside the consent decree we cannot know, and the decrees above suggested would not affect the right of the children to file- such a bill, if there be any ground for relief in that. form. ' It is clearly not to the interest of McKenna to begin another ten years round of litigation, if there is a plausible opening for it. Kor these reasons, if he, or those who now represent him,, will waive' the benefit of the decrees suggested, and take a . decree, under the last bill, for the amount of money paid by him at the first sale, which went in extinguishment of the lien debts, with interest thereon at the rate fixed by contract, he may do so, and sell the land at once, on time free from the right to redeem, in
It is the settled law of this State, that where the property of infants has been sold under judicial proceedings which are afterwards declared void because they were not parties, whether the sale was made to pay debts of the ancestor or directly for the benefit of the infants, the infants will be required to refund to the purchaser at the judicial sale so much of the purchase money as was received by them or appropriated in the payment of debt» which were a lien on the property: Elliott v. Cochran, 2 Sneed, 468; Arrington v Grissom, 1 Cold., 525; Martin v. Turner, 2 Heis., 389, Campbell v. Bryant, 1 Leg. Rep., 137.
These decisions rest upon a principle of equity so obvious as to commend them to our sense of justice, outside of their binding authority as precedents. They fully sustain the relief we have suggested subject to the election of the party. The Court in the original case, intended to sell, and the purchaser supposed he was. buying the entire estate in the land. If he failed to do so, it was because the infant children of the holder of the legal title were not parties. The case falls precisely within the authorities.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Samuel H. Jones v. Robert McKenna
- Status
- Published