— The plaintiffs claim title to the lot of land in controversy as the heirs at law of Henry Ganahl, who died intestate in the state of Georgia on the twelfth day of May, 1855. In 1867, one Andrew D. Smith filed in the Probate Court of the city and county of San Francisco, where the property is situate, a petition for letters of administration on the estate of said deceased, and an order was subsequently made by the court appointing him administrator. In the course of his administration of the estate, Smith presented to the Probate Court a petition for the sale of the property involved in the action, the court made an order directing its sale, and pursuant to that order it was sold and afterwards confirmed to one Leon Smith, to whose interest the defendants subsequently succeeded. At the time of sale the plaintiff, Henry Gordon Ganahl, was a minor, but he attained his majority more than three years before the commencement of this action. With respect to the other plaintiffs, it is not denied that the five years statute of limitations barred whatever rights they acquired as heirs at law of the deceased Ganahl. But in addition to the five years statute, the defendants, among other defenses, pleaded the three years statute of the Probate Act. That statute, in force when the sale in question was made, provided that “ no action for the recovery of any estate, sold by an executor or administrator under the provisions of this *97chapter, shall be maintained by any heir or other person claiming under the deceased testator or intestate, unless it be commenced within three years next after the sale.” The succeeding section reserved to minors and others, under legal disability to sue, the right to commence such action at any time within three years after the removal of the disability.
If this provision of the Probate Act applies to the present case, the instruction of the court below was correct, and the verdict of the jury should not be disturbed. It is contended, however, on behalf of the appellant, that it does not apply, because, as is claimed, the notice given of the application for the- appointment of Andrew D. Smith as administrator did not conform to the statute, and that therefore his appointment was void. The regularity of the subsequent proceedings in the matter of the administration of the estate, in so far as mere matter of form is concerned, we do not understand to be questioned. In 1Jarían v. Peck, 33 Cal. 515, it was held that the provision in question “applies to all sales, void as well as voidable, made by Probate Courts, of real estate belonging to persons who have died since the passage of the Probate Act.” Insufficiency of the petition for the sale Avas Avhat rendered the sale in that case void, but there is no distinction in principle between the insufficiency in the petition for sale, or in the notice of sale, and insufficiency in the notice for the appointment of the administrator, or other insufficiency in the progress of the administration. In the case of McNeil v. First Cong. Soc., 66 Cal. 105, relied on by appellant, the court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, for the reason that the deceased died prior to the passage of our probate law. In Pryor v. Downey, 50 Cal. 388, the point here involved did not arise. There is nothing in that case inconsistent with what was decided in Harlan v. Peck, on the authority of which case the judgment is affirmed.
*98Myrick, J., and Morrison, C. J., concurred.
Thornton, J., concurring. — I concur in the judgment on the ground that the action is harred by the general statute of limitations.