Carter v. Capshaw

60 S.W.2d 959, 249 Ky. 483, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 530
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 60 S.W.2d 959 (Carter v. Capshaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Capshaw, 60 S.W.2d 959, 249 Ky. 483, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 530 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Oouet by

Judge Ratlipp

Reversing.

*485 George Jackson, a resident of Monroe county * Ky.,, in April, 1928, died intestate,, and without issue, leaving" surviving him a widow, Mary Jackson, and as heir at. law, his next of kin of the .degree of cousins. At his death he was the owner of .valuable real and personal, property of the value of a little more than $25,000. His widow, Mary Jackson, qualified as administratrix of his. estate, and filed this action in the Monroe circuit court, to settle and distribute his estate between her and his. heirs at law. Jesse Capshaw and Mossie Capshaw, his. wife, were made defendants. She made these allegations as to them: “He claims, or is setting up a claim,, to be an adopted son of decedent, George Jackson, * * # and his wife has no other .interest in the action, except, as his wife.” A number of the defendants were residents of Kentucky; the majority of them were nonresidents, and absent from the. state of Kentucky. Summons was served on the residents, and a warning order-was issued for the nonresident defendants. Jesse Cap-shaw filed an answer, counterclaim, and cross-petition.. In it, we find these allegations:

“During the minority of this defendant, the decedent, George W. Jackson, and his wife, Jane-Jackson, by a process of law, adopted this defendant and that he is now a legally adopted child of the' decedent, George W. Jackson, and is entitled to inherit the entire estate of the decedent, subject to-the rights of his widow, the plaintiff herein, and pleads and relies upon same as the complete bar-to the defendants’ recovery herein, especially as to the recovery of this defendant, who, by reason of said adoption by decedent, George W. Jackson, is. a sole heir at IsCw of decedent, George W. Jackson,, subject to the interest of the plaintiff herein.”

His answer was made a cross-petition against all of his. codefendants, with a prayer that he be adjudged the sole heir of George W. Jackson as against the next of' kin of Jackson. No summons was issued and no warning order was ordered on his cross-petition. Summons, was issued on the residents, arid a warning order attorney was appointed for the non-resident defendants, on the petition of Mary Jackson to settle the estate. He filed a report stating he was unable to correspond, with the nonresident defendants or any of them, and “had carefully examined all the papers of the case and. *486 ■finds no defense lie can affirmatively make for them, or either of them.” Sherman Jackson and others filed demurrer, especially “to answer, counterclaimed cross-petition of Jesse Capshaw, on the grounds that the uonrt had no jurisdiction'of the subject-matter asserted in his answer in the cross-petition.” The court sustained the special demurrer, with leave to Jesse Cap-•shaw to amend his answer and cross-petition. Thereupon, Capshaw prepared and had served upon the attorney of the resident defendants, J. M. Jackson, who 'was only appointed attorney for the nonresidents, on the petition to settle the estate, a notice to the effect that he would, apply to the court to supply the record ¡showing his ■ adoption by Greorge Jackson and Jane Jackson. On the filing of the notice, showing it was •executed by delivering a copy to Mr. Sherman Jackson, B. P. Denham, attorney for Nack Cherry, John Cherry, •and Kate Eads, and to J. M. Jackson, “attorney for the within named non-resident defendants,” the court appointed a special commissioner to supply the judgment of adoption. On the hearing of evidence, the special commissioner filed his report in which he set out a very ■accurately and skillfully drawn order which he reported 'was a reproduction of the destroyed order, showing the ■adoption of Jesse Capshaw.

A judgment selling the land was entered. Later, in February, 1930, an order was entered reciting “that ■Jesse Capshaw had filed a petition to be made a party in which he alleged that he was the adopted son of George W. Jackson and Jane Jackson, and that a judgment of adoption had theretofore been entered in this •court which had been destroyed by fire and that thereafter he had filed an order and entered a motion to supply the judgment; that a commissioner had been appointed to hear the evidence and had heard the evidence and made a report showing the legal adoption of- George ■Jackson and Jane Jackson of Jesse Capshaw as the heir of George Jackson.” Thereupon, an order, declaring Capshaw had been adopted by George Jackson, was entered, directing the master commissioner to pay to Lawrence & Carter, a firm composed of Hebron Lawrence and J. C. Carter, Jr., attorneys for Jesse Cap-•shaw, “the remainder now in his hands, they derived from the sale of the lands in the above styled actions, less any'cost now owing, said net remainder now in his .hands amounting to $2,714.45.”

*487 . It will be noticed that after the special demurrer was sustained to the answer, counterclaim, and cross-petition of Capshaw, he did not file an amendment, but proceeded to give notice to supply the alleged judgment of adoption. The notice was executed on two defendants in person, and on Mr. Denham, an attorney for three other defendants, and also on the warning order attorney, who was appointed on the original petition, hut who had not been appointed on his cross-petition. The appointed attorney for nonresidents on the original petition for the nonresident defendants, and the issuance of summons on the original petition, did not dispense with the requirement of sections 90 and 97,, Civil Code of Practice. These sections of the Code apply to cross-petitions and summons where the defendants are residents of this state, or a warning order if they are nonresidents, is necessary upon a cross-petition by a defendant against a codefendant. Horine v. Moore, 14 B. Mon. 311. Section 630 of the Civil Code of Practice authorizes the serving of a notice upon an attorney appointed to defend a person constructively summoned and not appearing. The defendants on the cross-petition of Capshaw had not been constructively summoned at the time of the serving of the notice on J. M. Jackson. He had not been appointed as warning order attorney on the cross-petition of Jesse Capshaw at the time notice was served on him for the purpose of supplying the lost judgment. Until he was appointed as attorney for the nonresidents on the cross-petition, of course, he was without authority to receive notice or otherwise represent the nonresident defendants on the cross-petition of Jesse Capshaw. The cross-petition of Jesse Capshaw against, the next of kin, named in the petition of the -administratrix to settle the estate, was really an independent or an original suit as to these heirs, against whom it was made a cross-petition, and not only was a summons or warning order required before a judgment could be rendered thereon, affecting the defendants on the cross-petition, but a summons or warning order was indispensable, the same as if it were an original action. Allen v. Sweeney, 185 Ky. 94, 213 S. W. 217; Howard v. Jones, 147 Ky. 303, 143 S. W. 1058.

Without process on the cross-petition, against the codefendants against whom it was made a. cross-peti *488 tion, the court was without jurisdiction to render judgment adjudging to Capshaw’s attorneys $2,714.45, a portion of the estate, or to judge him the adopted heir of George W. Jackson.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.2d 959, 249 Ky. 483, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-capshaw-kyctapphigh-1933.