
    George F. Hecker and John Vincent, Executors and Trustees Under the Last Will and Testament of John McKeon, v. William J. Sexton and others.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department,
    
    
      Filed March 3, 1887.)
    
    Mortgages—Forclosure op—Objections to title—Improper guardians ad litem—Rule 49.
    The objection that the property to be conveyed is less nine inches in frontage than it was represented to be, will be overruled when the notice of sale containing a description of the property used the words, “be the same more or less.” A purchaser at a sale has the right to object to a judicial proceeding prohibited by the general rule of practice. Outside of Rule 49, and through the inherent power of the court to presume an appearance of fairness and justice, the appointment as guardian ad litem of an adverse party will not be tolerated. One who buys at a judicial sale may demand a title free from any reasonable doubt, as a condition precedent to the completion of his purchase. Following Rice v. Barrett, 2 If. Y. State Rep., 4.
    Appeal by Antonio Cuneo, purchaser but not a party to the action, at a sale upon foreclosure, from an order denying his motion to be relieved from the purchase.
    
      E. Ellery Anderson, for the purchaser; Ira Shafer, for pl’ffs.
   Macomber, J.

One of the grounds for the claim of the appellant is that the amount of land purchased at the sale was nine inches less in front on Baxter street .than it was represented by the referee at the sale to be. The affidavit of the attorney for the- appellant states that on the 14th day of September, 1885, which was two weeks after the sale, and the payment by the appellant of ten per cent of the amount of the bid, he raised this objection before the referee as a reason why his client should not fulfill the terms of the bid. It seems to have been assumed by both parties, as well as by the learned judge at the special term, that there was proof upon the motion to the effect that the land was in fact short, by this number of inches, of the amount which it was represented to be at the sale. This assumption, however, is a mistake of fact, for upon an inspection of the printed case it is found that there is not any allegation whatever that the referee made any representation at the sale concerning the amount of property. On the contrary, the notice of sale, which describes, it is true, the width on Baxter street as thirty-six feet and two inches, contains the following qualification, namely: “Thence southerly along Baxter street aforesaid, formerly Orange street, thirty six feet and two inches to the place of beginning, be the said dimensions more or less,” etc.

The purchaser was not deceived by anything done by the parties at or before the sale, and he could not llave been misled by the description contained in the notice of sale, inasmuch as it indicated that there might be some slight discrepancy in the courses and distances which the description or the premises contained.

The other ground for relief is that John Vincent, one of the plaintiffs, as well as one of the defendants, was appointed in the foreclosure suit guardian ad litem of John B. S. Kein, an infant defendant, when his interest as plaintiff was clearly adverse to the interest of the infant. Mr. Vincent is one of the trustees of the last will and testament of John McKeon, deceased, and is one of the plaintiffs in the action. He is also general guardian of the infant. He was made a party defendant as such general guardian.

His duty as executor and trustee of the will required him to bring an action to foreclose the mortgage against the infant, whose interest in the land consisted of an undivided one-half of the premises. His duty, therefore, as plaintiff against one of the principal defendants, and his duty as guardian ad litem, were wholly inconsistent and incompatible, and could not, with any propriety whatever, be exercised together.

The order making this appointment was doubtless made through inadvertence, the judge being probably misled by the failure of Vincent in his petition for his own appointment as guardian ad litem, to mention the fact that he was the same ohn Vincent mentioned in the title of the action as one of the plaintiffs. Had such fact appeared before the judge, this order doubtless never would have had an existence.

Eule 49 of the supreme court is as follows: “No person shall be appointed guardian ad litem, either on the application of the" infant or otherwise, unless he be the general guardian of such infant, or is fully competent to understand and protect the rights of the infant, and has no interest adverse to that of the infant, and is not connected in business with the attorney or counsel of the adverse party.”

This_ rule was made under and in pursuance of the Code of Civil Procedure, § 17 of which declares that the convention of judges “must establish rules of practice not inconsistent with this act, which shall be binding upon all courts of record, except the court for the trial of impeachments and the court of appeals.”

This court, in my judgment, rendered the appointment .of Mr. Vincent as guardian ad litem in this action something more than a mere irregularity in practice. Even if not absolutely void, so as to render it assailable collaterally in any future judicial proceeding, yet it is so far voidable as to enable any party to the action, or any person interested therein, as, for instance, a purchaser at a foreclosure sale, to raise the objection to it by motion, and to call upon the court to undo the inadvertence which it "fell into through the concealment of one of the parties.

I am of the opinion that any person actually interested in a pecuniary way in having a clear and unassailable judgment record as-the foundation of his title to real estate, has the right to object, if done seasonably, as has been done by this purchaser, to a judicial proceeding prohibited by the general rule of practice. Indeed, outside of rule 49, and through the inherent power of the court to preserve an appearance of fairness and justice in all its proceedings, the appointment as guardian ad litem of an adverse party would not be tolerated, and if done would be undone before the rights of third parties had intervened.

The question is not whether any injury has been wrought in this particular case. There probably has not been, though of that thing no one can be sure, because the infant has not yet been heard. It is to enable him to be heard effectively that his mouth-piece should not be the adverse party.

Who, on reading the judgment roll in this action, and not seeking information outside of its wrapper, would not believe that the court had been deceived into doing a great injustice to the infant defendant ?

One who buys at a judicial sale may demand a title free from any reasonable doubt, as a condition precedent to the completion of his purchase. Rice v. Barrett, 102 N. Y., 162; 2 N. Y. State R., 4.

Suppose the infant to be dispossessed of this land by virtue of this sale. Could the purchaser, with his present knowledge of the facts, successfully resist an action instituted by the infant to protect his legal rights ? I think not. While possibly the court acquired jurisdiction of the infant sufficiently to give a good title to a purchaser who had no knowledge or notice of the facts (but of this I am doubtful), yet this purchaser, with the information acquired by him subsequently to his bid, through the diligence of counsel, could not resist the claim of the infant that he had not yet had his day in court.

The purchaser should be relieved from the purchase, and the referee be required to pay back to him the money already paid in, leaving the plaintiffs to proceed as they may be "advised.

The order should be reversed with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion granted.

Daniels, J., concur; Brady, J., concurs in the result  