Bill by appellant to settle tbe title to a fractional interest in a certain tract of land. Appellant claimed the interest in suit by virtue of a guardian’s deed and the provisions of article 3 of the chapter on Partition, Code of 1907. Appellee Black claimed through a subsequent proceeding in the chancery court. Relief was awarded to appellee on his cross-bill, in which he contended that the proceeding under which appellant claimed was void for lack of jurisdiction in the probate court.
In the probate cdurt the guardian of four minor children, who along with adult children of John I\ Shugart, deceased, owned an undivided 4/105 interest in the land, represented that she on behalf of the minors had joined with the other owners of said fractional interest in a sale of that interest at a fair and reasonable price, and asked the court’s approval of what she had done. The sale was thereupon approved and confirmed by decree of the probate court at the end of a proceeding which followed the form of the statute. It thus appears by necessary inference that in her agreement for a sale, or her sale subject to the court’s approval the guardian did not join with “the other tenants in common,” if by its requirement that there shall be such joinder the statute intends that the entire fee must be made to pass by such proceeding.
(1, 2) “One proposition may be laid down at the-outset. It is that, inasmuch as the authority of the guardian to make, and of the court to permit, an absolute sale of the infant’s lands is limited to the grant of powers conferred by the Legislature, the terms of such grant should be carefully followed. Sales made in utter disregard of the precautions wisely interposed by law are absolutely worthless.” — Schouler, Dom. Rel., § 361. To invoke the jurisdiction of the probate court *172under the statute it was necessary that a petition he filed stating, however imperfectly, a case within the purview of the statute.—Whitlock v. Echols, 78 Ala. 207, It is enough to sustain the proceeding on collateral attack that the necessary facts are colorably or inferentially stated; but they must be stated in some way, and the relief sought must be within the power of the court. Any argument that would sustain a decree without the limited power of the court to- make, on the ground that the statute under which the court acted, or supposed itself to be acting, was dubious in its meaning, and that hence the court had the right to- determine its own jurisdiction, is specious at best, and necessarily unsound. The law of every case is fixed. It is for the courts only to declare authoritatively the law as it is, however painful or uncertain the process often is. Parties charged with notice of the record of such proceedings must be conclusively presumed to- know the law involved, for otherwise there could be no security of rights, no- end of litigation.
(3) Section 5253 of the Code, the section of article 3 of the chapter on Partition which declares the right conferred by that chapter, the rest being given to- process and procedure, provides as follows: “In all cases in which any person of unsound mind or any minor shall hold an interest as tenant in common with others in one or more parcels of land or realty in this state, and there shall be no valid authority to sell such interest vested in any person by the terms of any instrumen* under which such person o-f unsound mind or such min- or holds such interest-, and such sale shall not be prohibited or- restricted by such instrument; it shall be lawful for the guardian of such minor or person of unsound mind to join the other tenants in common in selling any such parcel of land or realty for -a division *173-of proceeds thereof, such sale to be made either publcly or privately, and upon such terms as to payment and security for unpaid installments as such guardian may deem to the interest of his ward, subject, however, to such sale being set aside as hereinafter provided.”
We have already virtually stated the question to be whether the authority given by the statute to the guardian contemplates a grant of such authority in cases only where a disposition of the entire fee is to he made. The statute provides the guardian with no authority to sell the land of his ward, or to enter into- an agreement for sale subject to the court’s approval, except to sell “such parcel of land or realty for a division of the proceeds thereof.” In other words the provision is for a form and method of partition. Now, the rule followed by the courts, to quote the language of Judge Freeman in 30 Cyc., p. 180, is that: “There can be no partition of an undivided interest. The estate sought to he partitioned must he such that, if a parcel is assigned to- any party, his estate therein will be an estate in severalty; and, if a sale is directed, its effect must be to transfer to the purchaser a like estate.”
Parties sui juris may, by contract, arrange a partition in kind, or a sale for division in lieu of partition, with a different result, and so, it may be conceded, may the Legislature provide; but, in view of the rule of the courts, it is not to be assumed, in the absence of some language of that import, that the Legislature has intended so to provide, for that would make confusion worse confounded, and foster a future of complicated and burdensome litigation.—Ware v. Vignes, 35 La. Ann. 288.
(4) If this were the case of one minor owning an rundivided interest, the rest of the estate being divided *174among several owners sui juris, there could he no reason to doubt that it would be necessary for the guardian of the infant owner to- join with all the other tenants in common in order to- sell the land for a division of the proceeds thereof under authority of the statute. There is good reason for this limitation upon the power granted to guardians. The average purchaser is not easily tempted to buy a fractional interest in property,, especially so where the interest is small and the policy of the enactment, while allowing private sales, is. to safeguard the interest of minors by requiring the joinder of adult tenants in common and a sale of the entire parcel of land or realty. Neither the letter nor spirit of the enactment was observed in the transaction under consideration. The-effort was to extend the statutory provision to a case not within its letter or policy, and we are agreed with the chancellor that the effort was abortive, and that the purchaser acquired no title.— Moore v. Gulf Refining Co., 124 La. 607, 50-South. 596. Appellant states in his brief that many titles, acquired in good faith, depend upon his construction of the law. We are not advised as to that, though it is scarcely probable that many titles have become involved in the peculiar predicament here shown during the brief life of the statute. At any rate, that consideration cannot be permitted with judicial sanction to work a change in what appears to- be the plain meaning of the statutes.
Affirmed.
Anderson, C. J., and McClellan and de G-raeeenried, JJ., concur.