[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 459 conveyed title to the purchasers thereat, and that it shall not be necessary for the defendant to prove any claim of title subsequent to the said Guardian's Sale if the Court holds that the said Guardian's sale conveyed title to the purchasers thereat, it being the intention of this stipulation that the plaintiffs shall have made a prima facie case under the first part of this stipulation and that it shall there-upon be the duty of the defendants to produce the record of the proceedings pertaining to the said Guardian's sale, and if the said record shall show a valid guardian's sale then the defendants shall be entitled to a verdict, other-wise the plaintiff shall be entitled to a verdict.
"It is further stipulated that the plaintiff Allie Jeannette Wilkins was born on the 17th day of March, 1890, and that the plaintiff Edgar Eugene Stokes was born on the 22nd day of January, 1897."
Upon the filing in evidence of this stipuation the plaintiffs rested. Thereupon the defendant offered in evidence a transcript of the record of the proceedings in the County Judge's Court of Polk County purporting to show a sale of plaintiff's interest in the premises, to the introduction of which there were objections on various grounds. The objections were overruled by the Court and upon motion of defendant a verdict was directed for defendant. Motion for a new trial was made and denied.
The assignments of errors are predicated upon rulings admitting in evidence for defendant, over objections of plaintiffs, the transcripts of proceedings from the County Judge's Court, refusing to direct a verdict for plaintiffs, directing a verdict for defendant, and denying plaintiff's motion for new trial.
Under the admitted facts it is clear that plaintiffs were entitled to recover unless it is shown that the guardian's *Page 461 or commissioner's sale operated to divest plaintiffs of their interest in and title to the premises. If, on the other hand, the sale was valid, under the terms of the stipulation defendant was entitled to a verdict and judgment in its favor. The decisive question, therefore, is one of law.
From allegations and recitals contained in the transcript of proceedings in the County Judge's Court it appears that the ancestor of plaintiffs, from whom they derived title to the property by inheritance, was at the time of his death domiciled in Jackson County, Florida; that his widow was appointed guardian of the estate of plaintiffs, who were then minors, by the County Judge's Court of Jackson County on August 21, 1900; that she published notice in Polk County, where the property involved is located. that on October 29, 1900, she would, as guardian, make application to the county judge of Polk County for authority to sell the undivided two-thirds interest of said minors, the plaintiffs, in certain lands located in Polk County, including those in controversy; that pursuant to such application the court made an order of sale in which a commissioner was appointed to "make deeds to said lands" when so sold and directed him to "make report of his action in the premises to this court for confirmation;" that subsequently, on July 15, 1901, the commissioner appointed by the court filed a report that he had sold a portion of such lands, including those involved in this suit, which report, on July 24, 1901, the county judge approved and directed the commissioner to execute a deed to the purchaser. No sale was reported by the guardian.
The primary contention of plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, is that from the transcript offered and received in evidence it is apparent that mandatory provisions of applicable statutes were not observed and that as a result *Page 462 the proceedings in the county judge's court and sale by the commissioner appointed for that purpose were ineffectual to divest plaintiffs of their title in the property and convey it to the purchaser at the sale. Specifically it is urged that the defect consists in the failure of the court to require by the order authorizing the sale, or of the guardian to furnish an additional or special bond conditioned that she would duly account for the proceeds of such sale; that the execution and filing of such bond with sureties to be approved by the court in such penalty as the court should fix was jurisdictional and that the failure to comply with this requirement of the law renders the proceeding void.
The statutes in force when this sale was made was the Revised Statutes of 1892, the applicable provisions of which are concededly section 2100 and pertinent portions of section 1924, which are as follows:
"2100. Sale of Real Estate. — Guardians of the estate of infants may sell the lands of such infants, whether in or out of the circuit, under the circumstances and in the manner provided for sale of lands by executors and administrators in section 1924."
"1924. Sale of Real Estate of Infants. — When any executor or administrator shall have the control or management of any real estate the property of an infant and shall think it necessary or expedient to sell the same, it shall and may be lawful for the said executor or administrator to apply either in term time or in vacation, by petition to the county judge or judge of the Circuit Court for the county in which said real estate may be situated, for authority to sell the same, and if the prayer of said petition shall appear to the said judge reasonable and just, he may authorize said executor or administrator to sell said *Page 463 estate under such conditions as the interests of said infant may, in the opinion of the said judge, seem to require."
Defendant in error, defendant below, contends, and the trial court seems to have held, that inasmuch as section 2100 refers to section 1924 only, which section contains no provision making the giving of an additional bond a prerequisite or condition to the right of an executor or administrator having the control and management of real estate belonging to an infant to make sale of such property, the procedure being regulated by succeeding sections, that guardians of the estate of minors may be authorized to make sales of lands belonging to them without being required to give such additional bond.
Section 1925, Revised Statutes of 1892, contains the following provision:
"Requiring Additional Bond. — The judge shall, in every order or decree authorizing such sale, require that the executor or administrator shall execute and file in the court a bond with surety or sureties, to be approved by the court or judge, in such penalty as the court or judge shall fix, conditioned to duly account for the same according to law."
So that not only was such additional bond so conditioned required to be given by an executor or administrator as a condition to his authority to sell land, the property of a minor, in his control or management, but it was expressly made the duty of the judge in authorizing such sale to require "in every order or decree authorizing" the sale to be made the execution and filing of such bond with surety or sureties to be approved by the court or judge. We think, therefore, that when the revisors of section 2100 made provision for the sale of real estate of infants by *Page 464 guardians "in the manner provided for sale of lands by executors and administrators in section 1924," it was their intention, and the intention of the legislature in adopting and enacting the Revised Statutes, that the proceedings in the two cases should be the same, and that the procedure in the one naturally and necessarily follows in the other as incidental thereto. Section 1924 authorized something to be done. The following section (sec. 1925) prescribes how it should be done. This conclusion is reinforced by section 2102 relating to the powers of foreign guardians whereby it is provided that full compliance with the preceding section (sec. 2101) "shall dispense with the necessity of giving bond and security as is required in the case of the sale of lands by domestic guardians," inescapably implying a construction of the statutes on the subject by the revisors and the legislature requiring such additional bond before domestic guardians were authorized to sell lands belonging to their wards.
In Hart v. Stribling, 21 Fla. 136, the court considered a statute (Chap. 381, Acts of 1850, laws of Florida) providing "that the said judge shall require of the said executor, administrator or guardian such additional bond as, in his discretion, may seem to be necessary to protect the interests of the infant." The controlling statute, which we have quoted (sec. 1925, Revised Statutes of 1892) when the sale now being considered was made was obviously materially different.
Power of the county judge to act in this matter was derived wholly from the statute. Unless, therefore, the provisions of the statute were complied with and the order contained sufficient basis for it to rest upon, the deed of the commissioner appointed by the court was void. Burton v. Compton (Okla), 150 Pac. Rep. 1080; Bachelor v. Korb, *Page 465 58 Neb. 122, 78 N. W. Rep 485, 76 A. S. R. 70. The county judge of Polk County was a stranger to the proceeding in Jackson County. His action can be upheld only to the extent that it conformed to the statute authorizing it. Failure of the court to require by the "order or decree authorizing such sale" the guardian to "execute and file in the court" the additional bond which the statute commands for the protection of the minors whose property was being sold is such a material departure from the proceeding authorized as to render its action nugatory. The order authorizing the sale and appointing a commissioner to make deeds to the purchasers contains no such provision and no bond appears to have been given. Upon the authority of the adjudicated cases by this court the proceedings were ineffectual to divest plaintiffs in error of their title to the property. McGriff v. Leonard,83 Fla. 695, 93 South. Rep. 179; McIntyre v. Parker,77 Fla. 690, 82 South. Rep. 253; Leuders v. Thomas,35 Fla. 518, 17 South. Rep. 633; Coy v. Downie,14 Fla. 544; Sloan v. Sloan, 25 Fla. 53, 5 South. Rep. 603.
In Leuders v. Thomas, supra, the court said: "The general rule is, that statutory proceedings to divest a minor of his real estate should be strictly pursued. They cannot be deprived of their property except by `due process of law.' * * * Parties who purchase from a guardian the real estate of his ward should ascertain whether he has full legal authority to make a valid title before they deal with him. In such a case the doctrine ofcaveat emptor has peculiar application, and the purchaser at such sale buys at his peril."
It has been suggested that section 2618 cures the defect in this proceeding. That statute, however, does not go to that extent. In McIntyre v. Parker, supra, in considering *Page 466 the effect of this statute, this court said: "The purpose of the act was not to impart validity to a sale ordered by the court without first obtaining jurisdiction to make the order. To place such a construction upon it would raise the question of its validity as destroying the vested rights of infants to the lands inherited by them and sold by order of the court without due process of law. But it appears from the history and language of the act that it was the intention of the legislature to restrict it to those cases where lands upon the petitions of executors, administrators or guardians had been ordered by the court, when all the requirements of the statutes had been complied with to be sold by commissioners instead of by the petitioner. This being true, the operation of the act will not be extended by construction."
Because of the defect in the order, the sale by the commissioner was unauthorized. Under the terms of the stipulation the verdict should have been for plaintiffs and the trial court erred in not so directing the jury on plaintiff's motion.
The judgment is reversed.
BROWNE, C. J., AND TAYLOR, WHITFIELD AND ELLIS, J. J., concur.
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