Summary
In Miller Lux v. Gray, 136 Cal. 261, 263 [ 68 P. 770], it is said: "It is well settled that an administrator in making sales of real estate is the mereinstrument of the law to transfer such title, and only such titleas is held by the estate.
Summary of this case from Mains v. City Title Insurance Co.Opinion
Sac. No. 878.
April 12, 1902.
APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Merced County denying a new trial. W.M. Conley, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
J.F. Peck, and F.H. Farrar, for Appellant.
J.W. Knox, and Isaac Frohman, for Respondent.
The complaint in this action charged in two counts. In the first, plaintiff, as assignee of Henry Miller, the surviving partner of the firm of Miller Lux, sued to recover from defendant the sum of $958, as money had and received by the defendant from Henry Miller. In the second count, plaintiff sued as the assignee of the Merced Security Savings Bank for the same amount of money, as money had and received by defendant for the use and benefit of the bank.
The facts are that the defendant, herein sued in his individual capacity, was and is the administrator of the estate of William C. Turner, deceased. As part of the estate of the deceased there came into his possession a tract of 6,500 acres of grazing land, which at the time was under lease to Miller Lux. About one half of this land was under mortgage to the Security Savings Bank. The mortgage had been foreclosed, the bank had become the purchaser at the sale, and the certificate of sale had issued to it. This was in the spring of 1896. The Miller Lux lease would expire upon September 6, 1896, and, desiring to renew the lease, Mr. Miller, as surviving partner of the firm, entered into negotiations with Mr. Gray, as administrator of the estate of Turner, for that purpose. Mr. Miller was informed and knew of the foreclosure and the sale affecting about one half of the tract, was told by the administrator, or by his attorney, that because of certain alleged irregularities in the foreclosure proceedings the administrator contended that the foreclosure decree and sale were inoperative to divest the estate's title, but that, in any event, the administrator would not lease a portion of the tract, but would lease all or none of it. Mr. Miller agreed to these terms, under the assurance, as he testifies, made to him by Mr. Gray, that "the money received from rent was not to be used; it was to be kept to be paid over finally to the proper authority." A lease was thus made by the administrator for an annual rental of two thousand dollars. Its term began on September 6, 1896. Upon September 7th, the following day, the bank became entitled to its deed under the foreclosure proceeding, and in fact received this deed on September 11, 1896. The first year's rent was paid September 16, 1896. The claim for money had and received covers such proportion of the year's rent as the mortgaged piece of land bears to the whole tract. The court found against the first cause of action, that upon the assigned claim of Miller, the lessee, but found in favor of the second cause of action; or, in other words, determined that under the facts the Merced bank was entitled to recover from Gray this portion of the rent.
The court having found against the claim of Miller, there is left the single question of the bank's right of recovery under the facts as stated, and there must be rejected from consideration any right of action which Miller might possibly have for misrepresentation, failure of title or consideration, and the like. Epitomized, the facts are, then, that Gray, as administrator, leased the whole tract of land, under claim of title in the estate of his deceased, to a lessee who took with knowledge of the foreclosure proceedings, of the fact that the bank held a certificate of sale of part of the tract, but who relied, — 1. Upon the assurance of the administrator that his estate still owned the property; and 2. Upon the declaration of the administrator that he would lease all of the land or none. There should be mentioned the added fact that the lessee himself did not care for a lease of a portion of the tract, as that would have been unavailable for his grazing purposes. He too wanted a lease of all or none.
It is well settled that an administrator in making sales of real estate is the mere instrument of the law to transfer such title, and only such title as is held by the estate. His deed is in fact but a quitclaim deed, and so it is uniformly held touching such sales that the doctrine of caveat emptor applies. (Jones v. Warnock, 67 Ga. 484; Headrick v. Yount, 22 Kan. 243; Bond v. Ramsay, 89 Ill., 33; 1 Warvelle on Vendors, p. 89; Woerner on Administration, p. 1077.) The same principle applies in case of lease. It is but an estate for years, carved out of and dependent upon the sufficiency of the title of the larger estate of the deceased. In this respect there is no distinction between a lease by an administrator and lease by a guardian; and it is uniformly held that a guardian's lease does not imply any covenant of quiet enjoyment. (Webster v. Conley, 46 Ill. 13.) Moreover, an administrator cannot contract so as to make his estate liable, except as authorized by statute. (Sterrett v. Barker, 119 Cal. 492.) Gray, as administrator, had the power to make this lease (Doolan v. McCauley, 66 Cal. 476), but in leasing he carved out an estate for years from such title and interest only as were in the estate of Turner. The rent was paid under this lease, to which in no sense was the bank a privy. There was not the slightest pretense that the administrator was leasing in subordination to the bank's rights. He was leasing in declared hostility to such rights, and leasing only such estate, much or little, as Turner had possessed. The lessee, therefore, takes such a lease at his peril. The rent flowing from such a lease belongs to the estate which the administrator represents. As the lease did not purport to, and could not, have bound the bank, the bank had full recourse against the tenant under the administrator's lease, and while the hardship may be admitted of the eviction of a tenant under such circumstances, or of the compulsion upon him to pay double rent, it is the same hardship that follows any person who, ill advised, deals heedlessly with one of limited powers, as to whose dealings the doctrine of caveat emptor applies.
92 Am. Dec. 234.
The order denying a new trial is therefore reversed.
Temple, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.