Parker v. Stephenson
Parker v. Stephenson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the.opinion of the court.
This is a suit for partition of a, house and lot on Charlotte street, in the city of Norfolk, and incidentally to' remove a cloud on the title. The defendant demurred to the complainant’s bill and the trial court sustained the demurrer, and the complainant appealed.
The plaintiff is an infant claiming an undivided two-thirds interest in the house and lot, the whole of which is claimed by the defendant by virtue of a, purchase at a trustee’s sale. The deed of trust under which the defendant claims title was placed on the property of the infant by virtue of proceedings in a chancery suit pending in the Circuit Court of the city of Norfolk. The infant claims that the proceedings in that suit did not conform to the statute in such case made and provided, and that consequently he was never divested of his title thereto. This is the principal question we are called upon to decide.
Henry Parker, the father of the said infant, devised and bequeathed one-third of his real and personal estate to his wife, the mother of said infant, and the other two-thirds
It is claimed on behalf of the infant that the above men- . tioned suit was a suit to sell or to mortgage the lands of an infant, and in either event the proceedings are void, not merely voidable, because the bill did not “state plainly all the estate, real and personal, belonging to the infant,” and further because it did not make parties, “those who would be his (the infant’s) heirs were he dead.” The property having come from the father, it was claimed that, if the infant were dead, his heirs on the father’s' side would inherit it,.and they were not made parties.
Before the loan was made the case was referred to a master commissioner to make the following enquiries:
1. Of what estate, real and personal, the infant defendant, Henry Parker, is-possessed or entitled, where such estate is situated, what its fee-simple and annual value, and what liens, if any, there are against the same.
2. Whether the interest of the said infant defendant will be promoted- by encumbering or selling the real estate in. the bill mentioned, or any part thereof, and if encumbered what amount should be borrowed on the same, and how the proceeds should be distributed or invested if encumbered or sold.
3. Whether the rights of any person will be violated by such encumbrance or sale and investment.
4. Who would be the heirs at law or distributees of said infant defendant if he were dead, and whether all such persons are properly before the court in the cause.
In response to the enquiries, the commissioner reported
In Coleman v. Va. Stave Co., 112 Va. 61, 70 S. E. 545, it is said: “In reaching the conclusion that the proceedings in the original suit were invalid, we have not been unmindful of the fact that sound policy requires that judicial sales should be sustained as far as possible consistent with the rights of others, and that innocent purchasers are favorites of the law. But infants are also the favorites of courts of chancery. They are not only incapable of conveying their real estate, but are incompetent to consent to any of
In Brenham v. Smith, 120 Va. 30, 90 S. E. 657, it is said:
“It seems to be settled law that when a new jurisdiction is created by statute and the mode of acquiring and exercising that jurisdiction by the court upon which it is conferred is prescribed by statute, a substantial compliance therewith, at least, is essential, otherwise the proceedings will be a nullity.” Again, it is- said in the same case: “The mandatory requirements of the statute providing for the sale of infants’ lands were all manifestly thought by the legislature to be essential to the protection of infants; they have been scrupulously and sacredly observed and enforced by the courts; and it is, as we have seen, settled law in Virginia that a substantial compliance with them is just as indispensable as process is against a,n adult in an ordinary suit. Indeed, the procedure in such cases is process itself.” Again, it is said: “As the law now stands in Virginia, an affirmance of the decree appealed from would as clearly be a taking of property without due process of law as the enforcement of a judgment in ejectment rendered without process on, or appearance by the defendant.” Again, it is said: “The legislature has wisely surrounded such sales with all reasonable safeguards, and the courts have been astute to give effect to this protective legislation.”
In Watkins v. Ford, 123 Va. 268, 96 S. E. 193, it is said: “Nowhere has the property of infants been more carefully guarded against injudicious sales than in this State. The legislature has wisely surrounded such sales with all rear sonable safeguards, and the courts have been astute to give effect.to this protective legislation. The case of Coleman v. Stave Co., 112 Va. 61, 70 S. E. 545, affords a conspicuous illustration of the rule of decision in that class of cases.” -
We shall next consider what relief should be granted to the complainant, an infant, in the present suit. It is said in Clark on Contracts (2d ed.), p. 172: “As we have just stated, when a person avoids a contract made by him during his minority, he must, as a rule,'return the consideration he has received. As to whether or not he must do so as a condition precedent to disaffirmance, or whether the other party must be left to his action to recover the consideration after disaffirmance, and as to whether the consideration must be returned where it has been wasted or otherwise disposed of, the decisions are conflicting.
“(a) Where the contract is executory on the part of the infant, and he has not ratified it by his conduct, as explained above, it cannot, according to the weight of authority, be enforced against him, even though he retains the consideration received by him in kind. He need not return the consideration as a condition precedent to repudiating the contract and pleading his infancy in an action brought against him to enforce it. When he repudiates his contract, however, he no longer has any right to the consideration he has received, and a,t least, if he has it, the other party may .maintain an action to recover it. According to the weight of authority, if he has disposed of the consideration so that he cannot return it in kind, he cannot be held liable for it.”
The decree of the circuit court will, therefore, be reversed and the cause remanded to said court, with direction to the circuit court to overrule defendant’s demurrer to the complainant’s bill, and to permit the defendant to answer said bill, to set aside and annul the deed of trust aforesaid,
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Parker By Etc. v. Stephenson
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Infants—Sale or Mortgage of Infant’s Lands—Substantial Compliance with Statute—Demurrer not Necessary on Part of Infant.—In a suit to sell or mortgage the lands of an infant, he is considered as objecting at every point, and no demurrer is needed on his part to protect him from defective allegations of the bill. Substantial compliance with the procedure prescribed by the statute is essential to the jurisdiction of the court to enter any decree in the cause. ' 2. Infants—Sale or Mortgage of Infant’s Lands—Sufficiency of Bill—Allegation as to Infant’s Interest.—The bill in a suit to sell or mortgage the lands of an infant did not state that the interest of the infant in the lands therein mentioned was all of the estate, real and personal, belonging to the infant; but that was the fair inference, and this inference was confirmed by the finding of the commissioner to whom the cause was referred, which finding was confirmed without objection. : 3. Wills—Construction—Will Speaking as, of the Date of the Death of the Testator—Descent and Distribution—Inf amts.—A clause in testator’s will which declares that “in the event of the death of either my son or my wife, my entire estate shall go to the survivor of them,” referred to the death of the testator, and upon his death, both of them surviving, they took fee simple estates in the property devised to them respectively. Upon the death of the infant, therefore, his interest in the property devised would descend to his paternal heirs. - 4. Infants—Sale of Infant’s Lands—Parties.—Where under Code of 1904, section 2556, upon the death of an infant his property would descend to his paternal heirs, such heirs should be made parties to a suit to mortgage or sell the infant’s lands. • 5. Infants—Sale of Infant’s Lands—Jurisdiction of Court.—In a suit to sell or mortgage an infant’s lands brought by the infant’s mother in her own right and as guardian of her infant child, there was a failure to comply with the statute by making the heirs of the infant parties to the suit. It was insisted that if the court had jurisdiction on any ground, its decree was not void, but at most only voidable, and that the mother had the right to sue as creditor of her husband’s estate, having paid his debts and legacies. But as the bill made no charge that the mother was a creditor, and did not show that at the time it was filed she had paid any debt or legacy of her husband, there was nothing in it to show jurisdiction on this ground. 6. Infants—Sale of Infant’s Lands—Jurisdiction of Court.—In a suit to sell or mortgage an infant’s lands brought by his mother in her own right and as guardian for the infant, it was insisted that the court had jurisdiction of the case to administer the real assets of the estate of the infant’s father, or that the suit might be maintained as a suit for contribution from the infant as his mother’s eotenant and devisee. But there were no allegations in the bill upon which the court, could found such jurisdiction. 7. Partition—Infant’s Lands—Deed of Trust.—In a suit for partition brought by a mother in her own right and as guardian of her infant child, no deed of trust can be placed on the property on behalf of the infant. 8. Infants—Sale or Mortgage of Infant’s Lands—Inherent Jurisdiction of Equity.—If courts of equity have an inherent jurisdiction to entertain suits for the mortgage of an infant’s lands for the purpose of preservation or repairs, the manner of its exercise is regulated and controlled by section 2609, Code of 1904 (section 5826, Code of 1919). It is there provided, amongst other things, that circuit and corporation courts in chancery may make any order for the management, preservation, and investment of the estate of an infant, and the method of obtaining an order for such preservation is plainly pointed out to be the same as under section 2616, Code 1904. Whether the jurisdiction to mortgage the estate of an infant for repairs and preservation be regarded as inherent or conferred by statute, in this State it can only be exercised in the manner pointed out by the statute. Code 1904, secs. 2609, 2616. (Code 1919, secs. 5326, 5335). 9. Sale or Mortgage of Infant’s Lands—Section 2616, Code of 1901—Void Mortgage.—Where in a suit for the sale or mortgage of an infant’s lands, it was the purpose of the parties to proceed under section 2616 of the Code of 1904, and they endeavored to conform thereto, but the proceedings were substantially defective for want of proper parties, a mortgage made in pursuance thereof and a sale thereunder were void. 10. Equity—Demurrer—Allegations in Bill.—The allegations in a bill must be accepted as true on a demurrer thereto. 11. Equity—He Who Asks Equity Must Do Equity—Infants.— Where the situation is such that equity can be done between the parties, the infancy of a complainant does not exclude him from the operation of the maxim that he who asks equity must do equity. 12. Infants—Suit by Infant to Set Aside Mortgage of His Lands— Rights of Purchaser Under Deed of Trust When Deed is Set Aside.—In a suit by an infant to have a deed of trust and sale made in pursuance thereof declared void and of no effect as to him, it appearing that the property had greatly increased in value, so the court had under its control the means of adjusting the equities of the parties, in decreeing that the deed and sale should be set aside so far as they affect the infant, the infant’s interest in the property should be charged in favor of defendant with the purchase money paid by defendant and received by the infant, with interest, and with permanent improvements, insurance premiums and taxes, and interest on premiums and taxes, and defendant should be charged with the infant’s share of the rents and profits of the property since he became purchaser, with interest.