George Kernodle died testate in 1879 the owner of land in Boone county. By his will his widow was given the land until their youngest child should become . twenty-one years old in January, 1895, when his widow should have an undivided third and their four children, appellants here, should have the residue. 1’n 1880 the widow married Stephen Neal, with whom she is still living. Mrs. Neal elected to take under the law, and not under the *55will. In 1885, Martin, administrator, procured an order to mortgage the land for $1,400 with which to pay debts, and to lease the land to provide means with which to pay interest on the mortgage, taxes, etc. Mrs. Neal and the children had no notice of the petition or of the .order. In a suit for possession and rents by Mrs. Neal against the administrator and his lessees, it was held that the order was a nullity. Martin, Adm., v. Neal, 125 Ind. 547. In 1888 Mrs. Neal and the children began this suit against the administrator and Addison B. Braden, to whom the administrator had executed the $1,400 mortgage described in the order, for the purpose of canceling the mortgage and quieting their title to the land. Braden filed a demurrer to their complaint and at the same time filed á cross-complaint to foreclose his mortgage. The demurrer was stistained, and the plaintiffs have never amended, nor has judgment been rendered against them for failure to do so. On the issues made on his cross-complaint, Braden had a judgment'of foreclosure. At the sale Braden bid the full amount of the judgment and costs, and received a sheriff’s certificate on May 31, 1890. No deed has been issued on the certificate. James Edwards, who was sheriff of Boone county frpm November 19, 1888, to November 19, 1890, made a written contract with Mrs. Neal on August 20, 1890, whereby Ed- ' wards was to purchase the certificate from Braden and was to convey ninety-five acres of land in White county 'to the order of Mrs. Neal, and Mrs. Neal engaged to withdraw all litigation concerning the Kernodle land and to see that no redemption was made from the sheriff’s sale. Edwards bought the certificate for the amount it called for, conveyed the White county land to appellant Joanna Baker as trustee; to hold the title subject to the order of Mrs. Neal, and took, possession of the Kernodle land, which he has ever since; retained. Appellants were not parties to this agreement,, had no notice of it, and never ratified it. Joanna Baker-conveyed the county l&pd, which she held as trustee.. *56for. Mrs. Neal, to. Mrs. Neal and her husband. The consid- ■ oration for the conveyance to Neal was the payment by him of $500 .for fees to lawyers who had performed services for Mrs. Neal .and ,the appellants. On proceedings to review Braden’s judgment..of foreclosure, to which Edwards, was admitted as a party, it was held that Braden’s judgment wgs binding on Mrs. Neal, but should be set afi.de. as to the children: Edwards v. Baker, 145 Ind. 281. Thereupon Edwards filed, an amended cross-complaint (in the right- of . thp original cross-complainant Braden) against,Mrs. Nefi,.. the children, the administrator, and Braden, seeking to,quiet title, .to the whole of the Kernodle land,., or, if that, relief could not.be bad, to quiet title,to an undivided third and .. to charge the two-thirds with the debts of. the decedent which had.been.paid by the administrator with the $1,400 bor- . rowed of Bradpn for that purpose. Braden and Mrs.,Neal¡. filed disclaimers. On issues made by the children and the administrator, on Edwards’s cross-complaint, a trial was had, special findings of-fact and conclusions■ of law were1, stated,, and judgment was rendered in favor of Edwards. i The children appeal. . The questions presented by their/ counsel arise on the exceptions to the conclusions of law.
On. the findings of fact, which are substantially embodied' in the foregoing statement of the case, the court concluded (1) That Edwards is the equitable owner in fee of the undivided third of.the Kernodle land.and is entitled to have,his title .ther.eto quieted as against all of. the defendants ,to his. .ero§s-complgint,; - (2) ■ that Edwards is.subrogated-to the rights of Braden and is entitled to a lien on the undivided., two-thirdg, for $1,390.70; (3) that, the administrator is-.' directed to proceed on proper petition and notice to sell the’ undivided two-thirds-to pay the costs of administration..'and claims against the estate including that'of Edwards,; (4). that Edwards recover his costs. ......
.Edwards has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal. The transcript was filed eleven months after the judgment was-*57rendered. The-ground of the motion is that-the cause'is-not- ap.pealabl'e under the general statute, but only under the special statute in reference, to decedents’ estates.' §§2609y 2610 Burns 1894, §§2454, -2455 lie S.' 1881 and Horner. 1897. ' The cause was begun-by the complaint of Mrs.. Neal and the. children to quiet title and to cancel the mortgage given by the administrator.to Braden. This was a proceed-' ing. on the equity side of the court.' Probate- jurisdiction was not invoked to set aside an order 'improvid'ently made and the erroneous approval of a’ mortgage under' th'e order, but the. complaint was a collateral attack, treating, the. pro-' bate' proceedings as a nullity. - Brought into court to answer this complaint-, the- mortgagee Braden filed his cross-complaint to foreclose. ' After he sold his certificate of pur-1 chase to Edwards, and his judgment' of foreclosure1 had been set aside as to the- children, -Edwards filed-his cross-complaint : to quiet án equitable title' and for' subrogation, -as ' above-stated. As the probate jurisdiction of the circuit court was not invoked nor exercised, the appeal was properly : taken-u'nder the general statute. Roach v. Clark, 150 Ind. 93, and-cas'es cited on page 96, 65 Am. St. 353. ■ ' ■
As to the-first conclusion of law, it is-to'be observed'that' the. dealings -between Edwards and' Mrs..'Neal occurred while she was under -a second coverture.. The court found that she had elected to take under the law,' not under the: will-of-her former husband. Her interest in the land was-therefore held by virtue of her previous marriage, and appellants are her children by süch marriage. By §2641 Burns 1894, §2484 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, her power' of alienating her interest was suspended during her second ' coverture, and on her death during the coverture the interest she: derived from appellants’ father-would go to them. Eveii' if the judgment of 'foreclosure on Braden’S 'cross-complaint,' which was not set aside as to Mrs. Neal, is conclusive upon her that she owned an alienable fee, it is not conclusive upon appellants in any respect or for any purpose. It was'set' *58asido completely as to them, and on the reformation of the issues between Edwards, as successor to Braden, and appellants, the court found that Mrs. Neal took from her former husband under the law and dealt with Edwards during her second coverture without the authority, knowledge, consent or ratification of appellants. Their contingent right to take the undivided third which Mrs. Neal derived from their father, upon the death of Mrs. Neal during coverture, is not cut off by the facts found.
Appellants contend that the second conclusion of law is wrong because Braden was a volunteer. The numerous cases cited by counsel support the general proposition that a volunteer or intermeddler is not entitled to’ subrogation. But, by the policy of this State, evidenced by statutes’ and decisions, Braden was not a volunteer. Braden parted'with his money on the faith of a mortgage based upon judicial proceedings. There can be no difference in principle between an administrator’s obtaining money by mortgáge or by deed of his decedent’s realty under order of the court. It is to the interest of the heirs that bidders should be encouraged. As against the heirs, the decedent’s lands are subject to sale or mortgage for his debts. If the bidder’s money pays the debts, the bidder is considered as the equitable assignee of the claims, if his title or security is avoided; and the assurance of this to the bidder is to the benefit of the ’heirs in securing competition and advantageous bids. §§1097, 1098 Burns 1894, §§1084, 1085 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897; Bunts v. Cole, 7 Blackf. 265, 41 Am. Dec. 226; Seller v. Lingerman, 24 Ind. 264; Muir v. Berkshire, 52 Ind. 149; Walton v. Cox, 67 Ind. 164; Jones v. French, 92 Ind. 138; Short v. Sears, 93 Ind. 505; Duncan v. Gainey, 108 Ind. 579; Stults v. Brown, 112 Ind. 370, 2 Am. St. 190; Fowler v. Maus, 141 Ind. 47; Milburn v. Phillips, 143 Ind. 93, 52 Am. St. 403. See, also, Crippen v. Chappel, 35 Kan. 495, 11 Pac. 453, 57 Am. Rep. 187; Dufour v. Camfranc, 11 Martin (La.) 607, 13 Am. Dec. 360; Valle v. *59Fleming, 29 Mo. 152, 11 Am. Dec. 557; Scott v. Dunn, 1 Dev. & B. Eq. (N. C.) 425, 30 Am. Dec. 174; Perry v. Adams, 98 N. C. 167, 3 S. E. 729, 2 Am. St. 326; Caldwell v. Palmer, 6 Lea (Tenn.) 652; Mayes v. Blanton, 67 Tex. 245, 3 S. W. 40; Hudgin v. Hudgin, 6 Gratt. 320, 52 Am. Dec. 124; Blodgett v. Hitt, 29 Wis. 169; Levy v. Martin, 48 Wis. 198, 4 N. W. 35; Davis v. Gaines, 104 U. S. 386, 26 L. Ed. 757.
It is further contended that Edwards is not entitled to subrogation, even if Braden would be, because Edwards was the sheriff who sold the land on Braden’s judgment of foreclosure. Section 7948 Burns 1894, §5871 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, prohibits a sheriff from purchasing any judgment or allowance in any court of which he is an officer. This section is plainly intended to insure the disinterestedness of a sheriff in executing writs that come into his hands. Neither in letter nor in spirit does it forbid a sheriff to purchase a certificate of sale. The writ has then been fully executed.
The judgment, in so far as it is based on the second, third, and fourth conclusions of law, is affirmed. The judgment, in so far as it is based upon the first conclusion of law, is reversed, with instructions to restate the first conclusion to the effect that Edwards have his title quieted to an undivided third only against Mrs. Neal, and not against appellants, and to modify the judgment accordingly.
Hadley, J., did not participate in this decision.