A question fundamental in character is presented by the record, that obviates the necessity of an examination in detail of the various errors assigned by the appellant.
The suit is to enforce the specific performance of a verbal agreement to convey land. The record shows that Hirshfield died about three days after the agreement was made, and before any improvements were placed upon the land, or any of the purchase money paid or tendered. At that time it was a naked agreement to convey land, and was void, being in contravention of the statute of frauds. R. S., art. 2464; Garner v. Stubblefield, 5 Tex., 552; Ann Berta Lodge v. Leverton, 42 Tex., 18.
At Hirshfield’s death his estate vested in his legatees, unaffected by the supposed verbal agreement made some three days prior thereto, and by which he and Smith were to convey the lots in controversy to Canto and Stein. If he had lived, and Canto and Stein, in pursuance of the verbal agreement, had gone upon the lots and made valuable improvements thereon, and paid or* tendered the purchase money, then a specific performance might have been decreed, not, however, by virtue of the naked agreement, but on account of the equities arising from the conduct of the parties. At the time the estate vested in the legatees by the death of Hirshfield, the agreement was void as to him as well as all others; and this being the case, Canto and Stein could not by their subsequent acts make valid the void agreement, so as to defeat the rights of Hirshfield’s legatees.
The effect of his death was to vest his estate in the *39legatees, unaffected by the void agreement, and subject to be divested for the purposes of administration only; that is, for the payment of debts and consummating ex-ecutory contracts made during his life. That event placed his estate in the possession of his executor, to be by him administered under the directions and pursuant to the orders of the probate court. The estate was in course of administration, and Canto, Stein and all others must be held to have notice of the fact, and that this administration was restricted in its purpose as well as in its authority, in the management and disposition of the property, to the cases provided for by law.
The fact that Canto and Stein went upon the lots after the death of Hirshfield and put valuable improvements upon them would not affect the rights of the minor legatees, for they could not thus be improved out of their rights to the lots.
Canto and Stein, with full notice of the facts, made the improvements; the minor legatees were not bound to repudiate the void agreement of their father, and to notify Canto and Stein not to put the improvements upon the land. To hold that because they failed to do this, that Canto and Stein, by their trespasses and wrongs, had acquired equities in the land that would entitle them to a specific performance, would be to convert wrongs into Equities, and under the guise of an equitable proceeding deprive these minors of their just inheritance.
On the contrary, courts' of equity have always been vigilant in protecting those „ who from tender age are unable to protect themselves; forms and technicalities have never been permitted to interpose between the minor and his rights.
The fact that Canto and Stein made improvements upon property to minor children, with full knowledge of all the facts, would give them no right to the property.
Smith did not appeal from the judgment of the court *40below, but on the contrary he expresses his willingness to accept the amount tendered, and consents to a decree of specific performance, in the answer filed by him.
[Opinion delivered November 28, 1881.]
So far as his interest in the land is concerned, it is vested in the appellees by the judgment; and they thereby become co-tenants with the appellant. Now if Smith had made the improvements upon the land, in a partition of the same between himself and his co-tenants, equity would, so far as it could be done without prejudice to the rights of the other parties, give him the improvements. And we see no good reason why the same rule should not apply in any partition hereafter made between the appellants and appellees.
The minor legatees were not served by process; they wrere parties only by service on their guardians; the decree of the court below undertakes to divest all right and title of these minor legatees in and to the lots in controversy, and to vest the same in the appellees; in other words, the lots are taken from them and given to the appellees; neither the pleadings nor the evidence authorized or warranted such a judgment.
The fact that the executor had admitted the allegations in the petition, and expressed a willingness to see the legatees deprived of these lots, could not affect the result; his unauthorized acts and admissions would not defeat their rights. The judgment is obviously wrong and ought to be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.