Dr. H. G. Jackson died in Monroe County in 1872, owning a large estate. He lived upon a plantation consisting of over 1,500 acres, title to one-third of which appears to have been in one of his daughters — whether by a gift, advancement or purchase by her is not shown. There was a large sum due him in the shape of lien notes arising from the sale of another plantation, and he owed over $10,000 of the purchase money of his home plantation, and considerable other debts. His family consisted of his wife and three daughters, who were children of a former marriage, and one of whom was a mingr. He left a will, devising his estate to his wife and daughters, the details of which are immaterial. The widow renounced the will, and took dower rights. The probate court found her dower in personalty to be $9,084.42, and 518.45 acres were set apart to her as dower lands.
The sum of $4,002.42 was paid Mrs. Jackson on her dower in personalty, and the balance, $5,080, finally used in paying for the lands purchased by her, the sale of which is sought to be set aside by this suit.
Dr. Jackson had a life insurance policy for $10,000, payable to two of his daughters. After his death they collected it, and evidence is offered in this case that it went to discharge the incumbrance on the plantation.
There is also evidence tending to show that Mrs. Jackson contributed to that payment. These matters are immaterial to a determination of the case. All of these matters were adjusted, and partition and division of the estate made, and the respective shares equalized by assessment. All the interested parties participated in this, and acquiesced in it, the minor by her guardian. If it were open to her to question it, that time has long since passed. These transactions occurred in 1875, and prior thereto, and she became of age not later than 1884, and this suit was brought in 1898.
It is, therefore, unnecessary to further notice the questions relating to matters thus adjusted, the partition of the land and the assignment of the dower lands. Following these matters, in 1876, the executors petitioned the probate court to order the sale of lands to pay debts. The probate court found the personal property exhausted, and the proceeds applied to the payment of debts under orders of the court, and that there remained unpaid probated debts amounting to $9,473.21. Some land was sold under the order then made, and in 1878 there was a petition to sell more land to pay debts. The court found that the executors exhibited a schedule of the outstanding debts, and that the personal property was nearly exhausted and wholly insufficient to pay the debts, and ordered the sale of the reversionary interest in the dower lands and some other lands. The total debts probated, outside the lien debts, amounted to $14,683.54.
At the sale the widow bought the reversionary interest in her dower land, the other lands selling to other parties.
Instead of giving notes for the payment of the purchase price, as the other purchasers did, she used the unpaid allowance for dower in personalty to pay the purchase price. The court confirmed the sale, ratified this method of payment, and ordered deed, which was duly made. She died in 1895, and this suit was brought in 1898 by the heirs of Dr. Jackson to recover this land from the beneficiaries under the will of Mrs. Jackson, who became Mrs. Govan long prior to her death.
The principal contention is that the sale was void because it was an order for the sale of lands to pay the dower of the widow, and not to pay debts contracted by the deceased in his lifetime. The facts do not sustain this contention. The order of 1876 showed $9,473.21 probated debts then unpaid. The land sales made after this brought $8,875.81; there was no personal property of-value left; and only a few hundred dollars of rents and collections from other sources. Therefore, it is apparent that the probated debts exceeded the sum realized from all the sales of the real estate, and it was for debts, not dower, that the sales were made. The dower only enters into it in this way: after the sale and purchase by Mrs. Jackson, she was permitted to pa3' with her dower allowance, instead of cash. This could not affect the jurisdiction'of the court to sell the lands, and at the utmost was but an error in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale.
It is insisted, however, that the $5,080 due the widow was treated as a part of the $9,473.21 of probated claims. If this be true, still there is an undisputed indebtedness of over $4,000, and that gave the court jurisdiction to order the sale and pass the title, and in this proceeding it is not necessary to go further. So far as collateral attack upon it is concerned, the sale is valid.
Appellant presents some other questions. In several forms the allowance of the widow’s dower in' personalty and the extent of her dower in lands are attacked. Evidence was introduced as to the rents of the plantation during the administration, thereby seeking to prove mismanagement and waste of the estate, and also inclusion of the rents in the personalty. These matters are all proper subjects for the probate court to deal with, all strictly within its exclusive jurisdiction, and all subject to quiet and speedy correction, when erroneously determined. A collateral attack cannot open these matfers; and, even if any were directly attacked, laches would bar their reopening at this late date.
The decree is affirmed.