delivered the opinion of the court.
The only question involved in this case arises on the response to the rule issued against the appellant, requiring him to comply with the terms of sale. The land sold consisted of several tracts; one of them was sold at the instance of creditors, and the other tracts upon the ground that a division could not be made without impairing greatly the value of the land.
Milton Moore died leaving several children, some of whom were infants when the action for the sale of the land was instituted, and others 'married women. The infants were before the court by their statutory guardian. The proceeding was had and the land sold under subsection 2 of section 490 of the Civil Code. This subsection provides; “If the estate be in possession and the property cannot be divided without materially impairing its value or the value of the plaintiff’s interest therein.” The appellant insisted that the sale was void, because no bond had been executed by the guardian of the infant and no privy examination of the married women.
There is some apparent conflict between sections 493 and 497 of chapter 14, Civil Code. »
Subsection 2 of section 490 authorizes a sale where the land cannot be divided without greatly impairing its value, or the value of the interest sought to be sold, and it could not have been contemplated by the framers of the Code that if a party was an infant or a married woman the property *121must be divided because no one would execute a bond for those under disability, although the effect of a division would be to lessen the value of the infant’s interest as well as that of the party seeking to have the land sold.
Section 493 does, however, provide that, “subject to the provisions of sections 496 and 497, and excepting the cases mentioned in subsections 1 and 2 of section 489, bond must be executed, and by subsection 3 of section 493 it is provided that if no bond be executed, the sale or conveyance under it shall be absolutely void. Section 496 has reference to subsection 1 of section 490, where the share of each owner is of less value than one hundred dollars, and also where the share of one joint owner is of less value than one hundred dollars, a sale may be ordered, although the owner of a share worth more than one hundred dollars may not consent to it. See subsection 2 of section 496. Sections 1 and 2 of section 489 is where the land is sold for debt. In all such cases no bond is required. But it is said that here the land is not sold for the debt of the ancestor, nor is any share less in value than one hundred dollars, and therefore the bond should have been executed.
“Section497 provides that, in the action mentioned in subsection 2 of section 490 (the subsection under which this sale was made), the share of the infant, or of a person of unsound mind, shall not be paid by the purchaser, but shall remain a lien on the land, bearing interest until the infant becomes of age or the person of unsound mind becomes of sound mind, or until the guardian of the infant or the committee of the person of unsound mind execute bond as required by section 493.”
So it will be seen that section 493 makes this class of cases also an exception to the rule provided by subsection *1223 of that- section requiring the execution of a bond, and contemplates a sale under subsection 2 of section 490 without any bond, nor is a privy examination of the married women, whether infants or adults, necessary in a case like this in order to pass the title to the purchaser.
It is argued that the purchaser may not desire to buy land with a lien upon it until the infant arrives at age, and therefore the appellant should not be required to comply with the terms of his purchase. The purchaser must know for what he is bidding, and if he is not informed by the judgment as to the nature of the lien, it would seldom occur that no one could be found willing to give bond for the infant, and take the money. In this case the infants are before the court by their statutory guardian, and the purchaser can, require that this guardian shall execute the bond, and take the money; and if he fails to do so, the chancellor will doubtless find some one who will give the bond, or in some way relieve the purchaser. When the lien cannot be removed, it will be time to raise that question, but not before. The order confirming the sale is. therefore affirmed.