Molina v. Ramirez

ROSS, J.

The property here involved was the community property of Carlos Ramirez and his wife, Guadalupe. It was acquired by them from the government during their coverture. It belonged to the one as much as to the other. As was said by this court in La Tourette v. La Tourette, ante, p. 200, 137 Pac. 426: “Upon the dissolution of the community by death, the wife does not inherit her share of the common property; but with the death of the husband the management and control of the statutory agent or trustee ceases. The wife acquires not her share, for that was already •hers, but in addition to her share she acquires the right of management, control, and disposition of that share; her status being thereby fixed as that of a feme sole. If there be no child or children of the deceased husband, all of the common property goes to the surviving wife. She has her share in the property, and in addition, by right of survivorship, and not as an heir, she acquires the share that belonged to the husband, and she takes all of the property in her own right, and with respect to the management, control and disposition of such property is reduced to the status of a feme sole, and must thenceforward with respect to it act for herself. . . . But under the statute also, if the deceased have a child or children,- the survivor is entitled to his or her one-'half of the property, and the other half passes to the child or children of the deceased. ’ ’ Thus it will be seen, regardless of any probate proceedings, or any legal action whatever, the wife, Guadalupe, was the owner, with the power of control and disposition over one-half, and the minor children became, upon the death of their father, the owners of the other one-lialf of the subject matter of this suit.

However, without regard to the community character of the property, after it was assigned by the probate court to the widow and minor children for their use and support, the law vested title to one-half of it in the widow and one-half of it in the minor children in equal shares. Par. 1729, Ariz. Rev. Stats. 1901.

*253The law made it the imperative duty of the probate court, where the. value of the estate, as in this case, did not exceed $2,000, “after the payment of the expense of last illness, funeral charges and expenses of administration,” to assign the whole of the estate to the widow and minor children for their use and support. “And there must be no further pro'ceedings in the administration unless further estate be discovered.” Par. 1730, Ariz. Rev. Stats. 1901.

There is no suggestion in the record of the discovery of any “further estate” after the order assigning this property to the widow and minor children. The 160 acres of land was the only asset of the estate. Any proceedings in the probate court concerning the property of the estate after the order of the court assigning the whole thereof to the widow and minor children was unauthorized, and in violation of the terms of paragraph 1730, supra. The proceedings in the probate court of April 17, 1900, whereby the administratrix was authorized to sell the land involved here was purely coram non judice, and the order and judgment therein was absolutely void, and without any legal or binding effect.

The one-half of the property, whether it passed to them from the community estate upon the death of their father, or whether it became theirs by virtue of the order of the probate court assigning it for their use and support, belonged to and was the property of the minor children, and it was not within the power of their mother, as such, nor as administratrix of the estate of their father, to dispose of it. Her deed ■of their one-half interest to appellant to that exent was of no force or effect.

But, as above stated, Guadalupe Ramirez, widow, was the absolute owner of one-half of the property, with the power of control and disposition. There was no legal impediment in the way of her making a valid deed of transfer of her one-half ; her status as to her one-half was that of a feme sole, but it is the contention of appellees that, inasmuch as she undertook to convey the property in her representative capacity, the deed in no event would have the effect of transferring her personal or individual interest. If, in the execution of the deed to appellant, she was obeying a lawful order of the probate court, and received none of the fruits of the sale, we would agree with the eases cited by appellees, and hold that her deed *254was ineffectual to convey any of her individual interest. In that case she would he the mere instrument of the court, and to disobey its order would subject her to punishment for contempt. Shoot v. Galbreath, 128 Ill. 214, 21 N. E. 217; Wright v. De Groff, 14 Mich. 164; Sip v. Lawbeck, 17 N. J. L. 442; Gjerstadengen v. Van Dusen, 7 N. D. 612, 66 Am. St. Rep. 679, 76 N. W. 233.

In the last case it is said: “Certainly Ole Peterson could not receive and retain the proceeds of the sale of the land, knowing that they were paid by the purchaser in the'belief that he was securing a perfect title to the land, and yet be heard, in a court of equity, to assail such title, nor would the capacity in which he might receive the proceeds be material.”'

Now, in this case, it appears that the widow wanted to convert the land into money with which to supply herself and children with the necessities of life. Laboring under a misconception of the law, she did the useless and fruitless thing of asking the probate court to authorize the sale. The sale, without such order, the court being without jurisdiction at the time, would have been just as legal and effective. She was paid the consideration of $400 by the appellant, and used it for herself and her family’s necessities. We think, under these facts she is estopped from now claiming that the deed did not convey her individual interest to the appellant. Rannels v. Howe, 145 Fed. 296, 74 C. C. A. 376; Corzine’s Heirs v. Williams, 85 Tex. 499, 22 S. W. 390; Johnson v. Branch, 9 S. D. 116, 62 Am. St. Rep. 857, 68 N. W. 173; Brown v. Edson, 23 Vt. 435; Carbee v. Hopkins, 41 Vt. 250; 16 Cyc. 712.

The deed as an administratrix’s deed is confessedly defective, and perhaps void. It contains none of the recitals provided by law, and, if the estate had owned the property described therein, the deed would probably have been ineffectual to convey title. The description of the grantor as the ‘ ‘ administratrix, ’ ’ therefore, may be treated as descriptio personae, and of no effect. She acted, so far as her interest in the property was concerned, in her individual capacity when she executed the deed.

Appellees contend that in any event estoppel cannot be invoked for the reason that it was not pleaded. However, the facts were fully set forth in appellant’s cross-complaint, and *255the mere failure to allege that by reason thereof appellees were estopped as to the one-half interest of the widow will not defeat the estoppel. Where the facts pleaded and the evidence show that the relief sought should be granted, that relief will not be withheld on account of some informality in the pleadings. Carlyle v. Sloan, 44 Or. 357, 75 Pac. 217-222.

Before the institution of this suit two of the minor children had died, and their interest in the undivided half of the land had descended to their mother, Guadalupe, and the four surviving minor children. It is the contention of appellant Molina that this after-acquired interest in the premises by Guadalupe, the grantor in his deed, inured to him.

Ir 16 Cyc. 689, the general rule is stated as follows: “If a grantor having no title, a defective title, or an estate less than that which he assumed to grant, conveys with warranty or covenants of like import, and subsequently acquires the title or estate which he purported to convey, or perfects his title, such after-acquired or perfected title will inure to the grantee or to his benefit, by way of estoppel.”

Paragraph 723, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1901, which is the same as article 627, Sayles’ Texas Civil Statutes, is as; follows: “Every estate in lands which shall hereafter be-granted, conveyed or devised to one, although other words, heretofore necessary at common law to transfer an estate in fee simple be not added, shall be deemed a fee simple, if a less, estate be not limited by express words or do not appear to have been granted, conveyed or devised by construction or operation of law. ’ ’

Guadalupe Ramirez’s deed, when tested by the provisions; of this statute, was unquestionably a fee-simple deed. It purported to convey the lands described in fee simple. Gathered from the deed, that was the evident intention of the grantor. There are no words, of limitation in the deed, and no law limiting their force to less than a fee simple. In Lindsay v. Freeman, 83 Tex. 259, 264, 18 S. W. 727, 729, in speaking of a deed in which the granting or operative words were as here, and of their force and effect as covenants of title, the court said: “This instrument is not a mere quitclaim, or a release, or a conveyance of the right, title, and interest which the grantors then had. It purports ‘to convey the lands and land certificates,’ and, purporting to *256■convey them in fee simple, it purports to convey an absolute, indefeasible title. It is such an instrument as would protect a bona fide purchaser. Richardson v. Levi, 67 Tex. 364, 3 S. W. 444. If the grantors, the Lowery sisters, did mot possess the estate which the deed purports to convey, nevertheless, as it was their clear intention, shown by the deed, to ■convey a fee simple, they and their privies, whether in blood, in an estate, or in law, are estopped to claim by an after-•acquired title, though the deed contains no warranty. The language in the deed whereby the grantors ‘convey’ the fee--.simple estate in the land constitutes a recital which imports ■an assertion by them that they are the owners in fee simple ■of the land, and having thus asserted the fact of their owner•ship, the grantors are estopped to deny such fact. Root v. Crock, 7 Pa. 380; Jackson v. Parkhurst, 9 Wend. [N. Y.] 209.” And in the later case of Scates v. Fohn (Tex. Civ. App.), 59 S. W. 837, 839, Lindsay v. Freeman was approved in this language: ‘‘As stated in the opinion in that case (citing with approval from certain authorities) : ‘The estoppel •does not depend upon the obligation of the covenant of war■ranty, although the books sometimes loosely say so. It depends on good faith, right, conscience, fair dealing, and sound judgment. When a person competent to act has solemnly made a deed (conveying not merely his interest at the time, but fee-simple estate), he shall not be allowed to gainsay it to the injury of those whom he has misled thereby. ’ The warranties created by our statute with regard to such a deed are -that the estate conveyed is free from encumbrances, and that the grantor has not conveyed such estate, or any right therein, to any other person. If we treat the deed as containing these warranties, it would be, if anything, a stronger asseveration by the grantor than without them that .the grantor owned the estate conveyed.” Guadalupe Ramirez and her grantee, ■Carmelita Canepa, are estopped to deny that the title- to the •interest inherited by the mother from her deceased children passed to Molina by her deed of April 17, 1900.

The appellees, by eross-appeal, complain that error was committed by the trial court in requiring, by its judgment, that appellees repay to Molina the $400 purchase price paid "to Guadalupe Ramirez, and all taxes that appellant had paid -on premises, together with six per cent interest on all such *257sums, as a condition precedent to the judgment quieting their title to premises taking effect. This assignment is well taken. The pleadings of appellant were framed for the sole purpose of defeating the claims of appellees. No facts are pleaded by appellant justifying such a judgment, as the only affirmative relief demanded by him was that his title be quieted as against appellees. The judgment, in requiring appellees to pay appellant the sums of money mentioned, did not conform to pleadings, but was outside of any issue in the ease. Ybarra v. Sylvany, 3 Cal. Unrep. 749, 31 Pac. 1114; Badaracco v. Badaracco, 10 N. M. 761, 65 Pac. 153; Tice v. Derby, 59 Iowa, 315, 13 N. W. 301.

The appellees should have judgment unconditionally quieting their title to all of said land, except the one-half of the mother and the interest therein inherited by the mother from the two deceased children, as to which portions the appellant’s title should be quieted.

The case is reversed and remanded, with directions that judgment be entered accordingly. The appellees recover costs in lower court, and each party pays his costs in this court.

FRANKLIN, C. J., and CUNNINGHAM, J., concur.