On the Merits.
Breaux, J.This was a suit to compel the adjudicatee to comply with the terms of the adjudication and take title.
The following we take as a correct statement of the facts relating to the issues upon which we have determined to pass.
Marx Weil sued out executory process against Moses Schwartz.. The property mortgaged was seized and adjudicated to E. Y. Benjamin for the sum of five thousand, nine hundred and forty-five dollars. Title was tendered to the adjudicatee, who did not accept it, whereupon the property was again advertised to be sold, but the sale was arrested by an injunction filed by Benjamin, the adjudicatee, against the sale, on the ground that the proceeding was unauthorized; that he was entitled to a good and valid title, and he further alleged that there were serious defects in the title tendered.
In his petition for an injunction Benjamin averred, as relates to the title, that it was defective, because the property was adjudicated to Moses Schwartz, the seized debtor, under a decree rendered in a proceeding for a partition which had not been preceded by a family meeting to fix the terms of sale.
It appears that the parties interested did not wish to hold under the first title to which we have just referred, and that, in consequence, a family meeting was held (under Section 2667 of the Revised Statutes, relating to the sale of minor’s property), for the purpose of offering another and second title to the vendee.
It was on the petition of Mrs. Brown, tutrix, setting up that all the proceedings taken for the partition and sale were illegal and irregular, for the reason that the undertutor was not qualified; that a family meeting was convoked for the purpose of selling the property to affect a partition and to fix the terms of sale of the property.
She alleged in her petition that the adjudicatee was willing to accept the title upon its being properly ratified by a family meeting and the court.
The proper order for a family meeting was granted, and among the members of the family meeting appointed, was Augustus B. *1550Wheeler, a creditor. The family meeting .was held and ratified, and the sale made in-the first partition proceedings.
The family meeting, in addition, recommended that the tutrix of the minors should be authorized, agreeably to the provisions of Article 2GGI of the Revised Statutes, to sell the undivided half interest of the minors at private sale, and to that end appraised the property .as required, and.recommended that it -be sold at .private sale on the same terms and conditions- that the property had been previously adjudicated.
Against the title under private sale, Benjamin urged that the family meeting that authorized it, was not properly constituted,for the reason that one of - the members of the family meeting, Augustus B. Wheeler, was incompetent, as he was a mortgage creditor of the •owners of the property, made apparent as such, by the mortgage certificate annexed to the deed under which Moses Schwartz acquired.
Benjamin also interposed the objection that the tutrix who represented the minors .in tlie family meeting and partition and sale proceedings was incompetent, as she had conflicting- interests, and that the minors should have been represented by an undertutor..
The validity or invalidity of Benjamin’s title is -the important issue. • .
A number of other issues were raised. • We passed them without comment and gave our attentive consideration to the questions raised regarding the title. It is, in our view, -valid and legal. A decision so decreeing, we take it, settles the whole..controversy.
1st. The appointment of Wheeler, a'mortgage creditor of the owners of the property, as a member of the family meeting, gives rise to one of the questions for decision.
The attack here is not directly made -against the judgment of the court approving the recommendations of the family meeting. It. is not a direct attack upon a judgment- between the parties to it. It may, we think, be considered as a collateral attack. If there was error in appointing this creditor as a member of the family meeting, it was the judicial error of the judge by whom the appointment was made in the proceedings long anterior to.those under which the adjudication here was made. The law authorizes an appeal contradictorily from such judgment or an action of nullity, but it does aot .authorize a collateral attack as here made.
2nd. We are not inclined to rest.our conclusion, as regards this *1551point, on the grounds just stated, although it does seem to us that the informality invoked by the attacking party was one anterior to the .judgment, which could not be inquired into collaterally.
We are quite convinced that third persons, innocent parties, acquiring rights to property at public sales are entitled to some protection. They are not bound to inquire into the validity and regularity of every judgment rendered in prior proceedings. These proceedings were conducted contradictorily with all parties concerned in a court of competent .jurisdiction.
In a well considered case, this court said: “It is the well settled .jurisprudence of this court that the purchaser at a sale made under an order of the Probate Court, which is a judicial one, is not bound to look beyond the decree recognizing its necessity.”
Again — “The purchaser at a judicial sale of property of the succession is not bound to look further back than the order of court ordering the sale.” Citing a number of decisions. Webb et al. vs. Keller et al., 39th Ann., 67; William R. Messick vs. Mayer, handed down this day.
The syllabus in Benedict vs. Bonnot et al., 39 Ann., 972, entirely covers the principle on this point.
“If heirs and creditors remain silent and inactive, and permit the property to pass by a public sale into the hands of strangers, purchasers and third persons accepting title from them are fully projected.” " .
Moreover, nothing shows that the purchaser had any notice of the incompeteney ■ of any member'of the family meeting. Non constat that he knew' that Augustus B. Wheeler was a member of the family meeting, or that Ke< knew that he (Wheeler) had any adverse interest to the minors,-for the fact does not appear of record.
Gilmer, Tutor vs. Winter et al., 47th Ann., 39, is in some respects a parallél case. It sustains our view upon the subject.
We take up for decision the adjudicatee’s (Benjamin’s) objection, •next in order of points pressed upon our attention.
3rd. The tutrix of the minors having an interest (hé asserts) in conflict with the minors, she was incompetent to represent them in the partition proceedings. While it may be, that there was a community between the tutrix and the father of the minor's, as urged by this adjúdicátee,'(which was dissolved by thé latter’s deáth), the record shows that the tutrix Had no interest in the property. It wap *1552owned in indivisión, one-fourth to each of the minors and one-half to Hugh Brown (formerly one of the owners), in regard to whose interest there .can be no question here.
. It follows that the adjudicatee’s objection is not sustained by the facts. It being manifest that the tutrix had no interest in the property, the contention of the adjudicatee has no foundation.
. 4th. But the adjudicatee apprehends that the title is not good for the reason, he avers, that the tutrix had community property, and the debt to Wheeler, he assumes was a community debt, and, in consequence, on that theory, she had an interest in the payment of that debt, and the sale of the property to that end.
It is settled, we think, that purchasers at sales are protected from such objections by the decree of the court ordering the sale.
If the court, however, should hold that one intending to buy, must look beyond the decree recognizing its necessity, and make himself familiar with all the facts having the least bearing, and guard against all irregularities of any nature arising therefrom, it still does non appear to us that the tutrix had an interest antagonistic to that of her children. It would have been at most a common interest between her and the children. It does not appear, however, with any degree of certainty, that the mortgage debt to Wheeler was one in which she had any concern as a debtor, and that she was benefited by the cancellation to which it appears he consented. The title, in our view, transferred the property completely. We have not found that these minors, on the ground just mentioned, have^ under our jurisprudence, the least ground to complain. There was not, as we appreciate the facts, any necessity whatever to appoint tutors ad hoc to represent the minors. There was no conflict of interest between them and their tutrix. The decisions to which we are referred by counsel for Mr. Benjamin were rendered in cases in which the tutrix or tutor had an adverso interest to that of the minors. Not the case here.
5th. Counsel invites our attention to another asserted invalidity, which had, it seems, at first escaped most careful scrutiny. It is that Hugh Brown, the co-owner, was the undertutor of the minors, and none the less that, as co-owner, he stood as plaintiff in the partition proceeding. Two family meetings were held, one prior to the sale to effect a partition, wherein the family meeting recommended the terms of sale, which, for some reason, the tutrix chose not to consider com*1553píete, and another family meeting held to ratify the public sale, or to-recommend steps to' be taken in order to transfer a good title; which resulted, as before stated, in recommending a private sale under the statute 25 of 1878 to effect the partition.
These family meetings were held in 1888. Henry Y. Ogden was the undertutor, and not Hugh Brown. We infer the latter who signed the proceeding or inventory in 1887, had resigned, and that he was succeeded by Ogden. • Brown was not a party to the sale as undertutor. -He already, we must infer, had been succeeded by Ogden. This point, made by counsel for Benjamin, we conclude, was based on a misunderstanding of the facts.
The sale was preceded by the required partition proceedings, in which the tutrix properly represented the minors. The terms were fixed by a family meeting, appraisement was made and all the proceedings received the court’s sanction, as shown by the court’s decree.
There is nothing defective or incomplete about the title. It only remains for us to affirm the judgment of the District Court.
For reasons assigned, it is affirmed.