This is an application for the sale of decedent’s real estate. It is conceded that if two of the debts which are contested by the owner of the real estate, who purchased the same within the period of three years after the death of decedent, are not valid debts ¡against the estate of the deceased, then, as the personal property is more than sufficient to pay the various debts, this proceeding cannot be maintained.
The petitioner, at the outset of this hearing, contends that, as he established the claims ¡and succeeded in recovering a judgment against the executor of the decedent’s estate for such claims, the judgment prevents the contestant from questioning their validity. These judgments are certainly not res adjudicata as against the contestant, as the contestant is not a privy in any way to such proceedings; and, in addition, it is apparent from -am inspection of section 2755 of the Code that it was intended to permit a person owning the property sought to be sold to contest the validity of any debt claimed to be owing by the deceased in this proceeding.
If there was merely reported to me the testimony which had .been taken in the two proceedings to recover these judgments I should naturally have been inclined to have acquiesced in such judgments; but the evidence taken in this proceeding and now submitted as to the character of such claims shows that they are of so grotesque a character that I cannot acquiesce in any such view of the law or the facts as impelled the court to render the judgments.
As to what is known as the one thousand dollars ($1,000) claim upon the Carrothers note, the facts are briefly as follows: There was held by the petitioner and the deceased, as trustees for the benefit of the deceased as life tenant and the petitioner as remainderman, this property which is known as the Carroth
The other debt which petitioner attempts to assert against the decedent’s estate is based upon even a more remarkable state of
In considering this question, we should notice at the outset that it is provided that, among the claims which may be made the basis for this proceeding, that of a creditor by mortgage, which is a lien upon decedent’s estate, is expressly excluded. Therefore, at the time of the death of the deceased, this debt could not have been made the basis for this proceeding, or, if the proceeding was instituted by some other person, could not have been included as among the debts to be paid by the moneys realized on the same. This would seem to be a sufficient answer to this matter, but there is more. It is plain that any claim made upon a debt due upon the bond in this case must have as its basis the breach by the executor of the contract which the petitioner alleges was made with him. In other words, the basis of the debt is not the obligation left by the deceased at her death but such as follows the agreement with the executor and its breach.
This proceeding is a technical and statutory one. A person seeking its benefits must clearly and properly see to the correctness of every step taken under the provisions of the law in order to affect the rights of persons honestly purchasing real estate of a decedent within the period in which the proceeding may be instituted. There is no rule of liberal construction as against innocent third parties which should lead the court to strain after a result which will sustain the validity of the proceeding.
Several objections are made by the contestant as to technical defects in the parties and character of the proceeding. Some of these, in my judgment, are not well founded, but it seems to me that the objection founded upon the fact that Phillips, the person who made the new loan after the satisfaction of the mortgage in question, is a necessary party is sustained by the Code, and this proceeding should, fall in consequence of the failure of the petitioner to make him a party. But as in the examination of the question I have reached the conclusion that upon its merits the application should be denied, I prefer to state that fact in this opinion. Let decree be entered accordingly.
Decreed accordingly.