Erhart v. Bass

Texas Supreme Court
Erhart v. Bass, 54 Tex. 97 (Tex. 1880)
1880 Tex. LEXIS 131
Gould

Erhart v. Bass

Opinion of the Court

Gould, Associate Justice.

In our opinion, the transcript of the probate proceedings of the county court of Wise county showed a valid administration on the estate of Boyles, an order of sale of the land in controversy under which there might have been a valid public sale; a return of sale, from which it does not appear, nor was it made to appear by evidence, that the sale was otherwise than at public outcry, as prescribed by law, and an order *99which amounted to a confirmation of that sale. The evidence further shows that the purchase money was paid, and though the purchasers secured no deed from the administrator, those proceedings prima facie vested in them the title of the estate sufficiently to support an action of trespass to try title against a trespasser. Rock v. Heald, 27 Tex., 524; Brown v. Christie, id., 73; Flanagan v. Pierce, id., 79,

Whether it would be sufficient to defeat that and establish the nullity of the sale, notwithstanding the order of confirmation, to show that it was made privately and that the order of confirmation was made with knowledge of that fact, is a question of importance and difficulty which has not been sufficiently discussed to make it incumbent on the court to decide it, although it may possibly prove to be the question on which the case will ultimately ton.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Beversed and remanded.

[Opinion delivered December 14, 1880.]

Reference

Full Case Name
E. P. Erhart v. T. C. Bass
Cited By
2 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
1. Trespass to try title—Administrator’s sale.—The transcript in probate proceedings in a county court showed: 1. A valid administration. 3. An order to sell land at public or private sale. 3. A return of sale, which did not disclose whether the sale was a public or a private one, and an order which amounted to a confirmation of the sale. Evidence in connection therewith established the payment of the purchase money and that no deed was made. Held — 1. The facts were sufficient to enable the purchaser to maintain trespass to try title. 3. The title prima facie vested in the purchaser. 3. Fact cases—Confirmation of sale.—See statement of case for order of probate court, held to be virtually a confirmation of an administrator’s sale. 3. Query—Fraud.—Whether, in such a case, it would be sufficient to defeat the title claimed by the purchaser, to show that the sale was really made privately, and that the order of confirmation was made with knowledge of that fact, qucere?