Cini v. Ball

156 S.W.2d 486, 288 Ky. 471, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 129
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 28, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 156 S.W.2d 486 (Cini v. Ball) 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
Cini v. Ball, 156 S.W.2d 486, 288 Ky. 471, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 129 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Albert Smith, a citizen and resident of Harlan County, Kentucky, died in 1916, leaving his widow and four infant children, who were the plaintiffs below and are appellants here. He owned some real estate, a portion of the title to which was inherited from his father, and the remainder of the title was acquired by him from *472 his brothers and sisters, who were joint heirs of their father with him. The land as described in the petition consisted of two parcels, with no statement as to the acreage of either, but the descriptions indicate that neither of them was large, and the testimony in the case reveals that they were adjacent to some town and available for residence lots. The mother of Albert Smith was never assigned dower in her husband’s real estate, and the land that her husband’s heirs received under the laws of descent upon his death was incumbered by her dower rights, and which was true at the time of the judgment herein complained of and hereafter referred to. After the death of Albert Smith, his widow became entitled to dower in the land of which he died seized, and which, of course, was in addition to the dower right incumbrance of his mother.

Sometime following the death of Albert Smith, his widow married one W. M. Napier, who purchased the dower right of Smith’s mother in the land he inherited, and as such he and his wife, as the owner of the second dower right in and to the land, filed an action in the Harlan circuit court on June 25, 1921, against the instant plaintiffs and appellants to sell the land for division of its proceeds, and which action is maintainable under the authority conferred by Subsection 3 of Section 490 of our Civil Code of Practice. No complaint is made against the sufficiency of the allegations of the petition in that case to confer jurisdiction upon the court to order the sale, if the facts stated were true. Therefore, if the sufficiency of the petition in that case were attacked in this one it would be without avail, since all allegations necessary to confer jurisdiction under that section were made by the plaintiffs in their petition therein. The defendants therein — as heirs of Albert Smith — were each infants under fourteen years of age at the time the action referred to was filed. The court later rendered a default judgment therein in accordance with the prayer of the petition, and ordered its master commissioner to make the sale, with certain directions therein, but which — as will later appear — are not necessary to be referred to or discussed in the disposition of the questions properly presented on this appeal.

When the infant heirs of Albert Smith (plaintiff and appellants herein and defendants in the division suit) arrived at the age of fourteen years, each of them *473 selected guardians who were duly appointed and qualified to act as such. They consisted of three .girls and one boy, the latter of whom was the youngest, and all of them resided with their stepfather and mother following the date of her second marriage until they later acquired other homes. The two oldest daughters (after arriving at age and had married in the meantime) were paid— either through their guardians or the master commissioner who had collected the proceeds of the sale — their full portion of the proceeds of sale, after deducting costs and a calculated interest of the life incumbrances of the two widows in accordance with "Wigglesworth’s Mortality Tables, although they denied in the petition in this case that they were ever paid anything by anyone. The guardian of Lawrence Smith, the youngest heir of his father, Albert Smith, advanced money for the support, maintenance and education of his ward to the amount of the latter’s entire interest in the proceeds of his father’s realty, and which the guardian had collected from the master commissioner of the court who made the sale in the case referred to.

The third daughter of Albert Smith married a man by the name of Adams before she was twenty-one years of age, and at her instance he was appointed her guardian and qualified as such. He collected the amount of the proceeds due her from the sale of her father’s real estate and invested it in the purchase of a farm to which he and his wife removed where they have continued to reside and raise their family. Such payments were made at different periods after the purchase money was collected by the master commissioner, and each guardian made settlement with his respective county court before the instant action was commenced.

The instant action was filed in the Harlan circuit court jointly by all of the four heirs of Albert Smith against the purchasers of the two described tracts hereinbefore referred to (there being separate purchasers of each tract), and against a number of their vendees to whom they had sold portions of the land that each of them purchased at the judicial sale. After setting out in due form the facts we have narrated, and averring that none of them had ever been paid any of the proceeds, this allegation is made “Plaintiffs say that the record in said action shows that the judgment for the sale of said property was and is void, for the reason that *474 no proof was taken, by interrogatories or otherwise, as required by the provisions of the Code in cases seeking the sale of infants’ land, and said judgment was rendered by default. But they say that if the court should find that the sale is not void, they are entitled to a lien on the above described property, and to have same sold to satisfy their respective claims. They say that no part of either of said amounts set out herein and no interest thereon has ever been paid to them.” (Our emphasis.)

They then prayed that the sale in the original action referred to — as well as the judgment rendered therein — be declared void, and they be permitted to recover title to the real estate attempted to be sold therein. They also made án alternative prayer, that they be declared a lien on the land sold in the former action for their respective, and as they alleged unpaid, portions of its proceeds, and that such lien be enforced in this action and for judgment against the defendants personally for such amounts. The separate answers filed by defendants contested the right of plaintiffs to any of the relief sought by them by their petition, and after proof taken and cause submitted the court dismissed the petition, to reverse which plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The brief filed by appellants’ counsel is largely devoted to a discussion of the legal consequences of a failure to require the execution of the bond required by Section 493 of our Civil Code of Practice' — it being argued by counsel that no bond was filed in the case in which the land was sold as therein required (but which assumed fact is not sustained by the proof) and that the judgment of sale was and is void. But an examination of the petition in this case demonstrates that all of that argument is wasted and need not be considered by us in the determination of this appeal, since no such failure is even alleged in the petition as a ground for this collateral attack on the judgment in which the land was ordered sold. The only fact that the petition contains as a ground for the invalidity of the attacked judgment is the one hereinbefore inserted, and which is — that no proof was taken or heard by the court before rendering it.

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Related

Adams v. Security Trust Co.
194 S.W.2d 521 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 S.W.2d 486, 288 Ky. 471, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cini-v-ball-kyctapphigh-1941.