Noah Ragan was administrator upon the estate of Jesse Hawkins, deceased, and on the 2d day of December, 1847, he filed his petition in the proper court for the sale of real estate of said Jesse, deceased, for the payment of his debts. He made Jesse’s heirs parties defendant, viz: Layton, Sarah, Rachael, Hannah, Martha Ann, Isaac, John and Martha Hawkins. Afterwards, on the 20th day of De*195ember, the record says, it appearing to the satisfaction of the Court that process had been served more than ten days before the first day of the term, &c., H. G. Newcomb, Fsq., was appointed guardian ad litem, and answered for Rachael, Hannah, Martha Ann, Isaac and John Hawkins, infant heirs of Jesse, and a default was taken against Layton, Sarah and Martha, adults.
Eegularly issued writs are copied into the transcript before us. Eeturns upon them are not. A sale of land was ordered. Afterwards, on the 18th day of April, 1848, the administrator reported that he had made a sale of a piece of the land of Jesse to James Wilson, the sale having been made on the 5th of February, 1848. The sale was approved and confirmed by the Court on the 20th day of April, 1848.
Afterward, at the August term of the Court, 1850, the administrator reported full payment of the purchase-money by Wilson, and the Court, having examined the matter, ordered a deed, &c..
Afterward, at the August term of the Court, 1852, a deed was reported, approved and ordered to be delivered.
At each of the recited proceedings in Court, the record shows that a petition was filed narrating the previous proceedings and orders in the cause, and that the subject matter of the petition was, on each occasion, considered and adjudicated upon by the Court.
The proceedings seem to have been conducted with care and under watchfulness on the part of the Court,
On the 21st of November, 1859, this suit was instituted by the heirs of Hawkins against all persons interested, to establish their title to, and to recover possession of the land sold, as above set forth, by the administrator of the estate of Jesse Hawkins. That sale, we have already seen, was confirmed on the 20th day of April, 1849, eleven years, seven months and *196one day anterior to the commencement of this suit. See 2 O. & H. p. 159, and cases cited in notes.
This suit is not a direct proceeding to reverse or set aside the order of sale, or the judgment of confirmation, but, leaving them undisturbed, to recover possession of the land on the ground that the proceedings in which the sale was had are void. Those proceedings are attacked collaterally, not directly, by this suit.
The complaint contained four paragraphs.
A demurrer was sustained to two of them, and issues of fact were formed and tried upon two of them. There was judgment for the defendants on the trial of the issues of fact, and no exceptions were taken whereby the evidence given can be brought to this Court, or the merits of the case upon those issues be otherwise reviewed. And if all the questions, arising upon the demurrer to the two paragraphs that were held insufficient, could have been tried under the issues upon the other two, it would be unnecessary that we should examine the ruling upon the demurrer. We think the issues tried upon the two paragraphs embraced the entire merits of the case; but we waive the point and will examine the two questions argued, in his brief, by appellant’s counsel.
1. Is jurisdiction over the persons of the heirs to be presumed upon the statements in the-transcript of the record of the Probate Court which ordered and confirmed the administrator’s sale of the land? We think it is. The Probate Court was, and the Common Pleas is a Court of general jurisdiction, whose action is to be judged, subject to the presumptions accorded’ to that class of Courts. Doe v. Smith, 1 Ind. 451.
The rule as to presumption of notice in such Courts is that, where the facts recited in the record do not reasonably exclude the inference that notice was given to the defendants, of the pendency of the suit, it will be presumed that it was *197given. Gerrard v. Johnson, 12 Ind. 536; Cox v. Mathews, 17 id. 367.
In the case at bar, writs were issued in time for regular service and return. They were returned. The Court says, as a part of its judgment, that it appeared to it that they had been duly served. The record in no manner excludes the inference that they had been served. The return of service may have been omitted by the Clerk in making out the transcript. He has not said, in a way that can be respected by this Court, viz : by return to a certiorari, that the returns are not upon the original writs; or that they may not have been made upon separate papers on file with the writs. Such returns may have existed and been lost. And even if the Clerk had said there never had been any returns in the office, it perhaps might have been shown to the Probate Court that the writs had been served, by' parol evidence, not made a matter of record; perhaps we should, in a case of necessity, which this is not, indulge such a presumption.
2. At the administrator’s sale, Ragan, the administrator, procured Wilson to cry the sale for him. Wilson, the crier, made the last bid for the property himself; Ragan, the administrator, accepted it, reported Wilson to the Court as the buyer; the matter was considered by the Court, the sale, three several times, as we have seen, was approved by the Court, and a deed finally made and approved pursuant to it.
Now, we are inclined to think this was a sale by the administrator to a third person and valid. We doubt whether a mere mouth piece for an administrator, in his presence performing simply the special act of crying a sale of a piece of ground, is a person to be classed among, those standing in a trust relation, such as to disable him to purchase at the sale. See Lewis v. Reed, 11 Ind. 239. But for the purposes of this case we will concede Wilson to have been a trustee purchasing the trust estate of himself, and what follows ?
John Caven, for the appellants. Newcomb $ Tarkington, and Barbour $ Howland, for the appellees.1. Such a purchase is not void at common law but voidable. If authorized by the Court before the sale, or sanctioned and confirmed by it afterwards, it may stand. Hill on Trustees, top p. 237, side p. 159; Huff v. Earl, 3 Ind. 306.
, 2- The mode of avoiding it is to apply to Court within a reasonable time to have it set aside and the property re-exposed to sale. Brackenridge v. Holland, 2 Blackf. 377; Doe v. Harvey, 3 Ind. 104; see id. 277; Martin v. Wyncoop et al., 12 Ind. 266.
3. But this remedy can not be made available after the estate has passed into the hands of bona fide purchasers without notice, as it is shown by the record to have done in the case at bar. Hill on Trustees, side p. 509. But the cestui que trust} will be entitled to the profits made by the trustee in his sale. Beckett v. Bledsoe, 4 Ind. 256; Brackenridge v. Holland, supra.
Per Curiam.The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.