Clark v. Satterfield's Administrator

26 S.W.2d 516, 233 Ky. 600, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 616
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 28, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 26 S.W.2d 516 (Clark v. Satterfield's Administrator) 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
Clark v. Satterfield's Administrator, 26 S.W.2d 516, 233 Ky. 600, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 616 (Ky. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Thomas

Affirming.

William C. Satterfield, died intestate and a resident of Bath county in August, 1928, leaving surviving him as his only heirs, a daughter, the plaintiff and appellee Mrs. Emma Applegate, and a granddaughter, the plaintiff and appellee Evelyn Satterfield, an infant for whom another plaintiff and appellee, James C. Blount, is the duly appointed and qualified statutory guardian. A month or more before the death of William C. Satterfield, his widowed sister, Mrs. Almira W. Bradshaw, died a resident of Bath county, leaving no descendant surviving her, but only collateral heirs. She left a last will and testament by which she devised to her brother, the deceased, William C. Satterfield, all of her property after the payment of debts and funeral expenses and which was duly probated in the county court of Bath county. Shortly after her death and before the death of William C. Satterfield, the sole legatee and devisee therein, other collateral kindred instituted contest proceedings; but before a trial thereof the statutory guardian of the infant, Evelyn Satterfield, and other adult contestees and interested parties, agreed upon a settlement of the contest by paying to contestants in the aggregate the sum of $2,500 to be realized from the estate of the testatrix.

Mrs. Bradshaw some time before her death borrowed from the appellee and defendant below, the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, the sum of $7,000, evidenced by notes of different amounts and due at future different periods, and all of them secured by a mortgage on the farm of testatrix, located in Bath county, and containing slightly more than 298 acres. The mortgage and the notes contained precipitating clauses whereby the holder of the indebtedness might declare all of it due and proceed to collect it by enforcement of the lien, upon default of payment of any installment of the principal or *602 interest thereon. Mrs. Bradshaw before her death reduced that indebtedness to $5,500, leaving that amount due and unpaid at the time of her death with default in some payments authorizing a precipitation of the due date.

Some time prior to the death of William C. Satterfield, a judgment had been recovered against him for nearly $2,000, and, after the death of Mrs. Bradshaw, an execution upon that judgment was levied upon the farm of 298 acres devised to him by his sister, and the plaintiff and appellee, C. W. Goodpaster, became the owner of that debt by purchase; but he expressly seeks to collect only the amount that he paid therefor with interest, which was, at the time of the trial herein, $1,-650. There was therefore due from W. C. Satterfield, and which were liens upon his devised farm, a total principal sum of $9,650 and interest thereon, and both he and his deceased sister owed unsecured debts above the amount of personal property owned by each.

In that situation this equity action was filed in the Bath circuit court by the administrator of W. C. Satterfield, his daughter, his infant grandaughter, by her statutory guardian, and by the latter as guardian for his ward, C. W. Goodpaster, and the other collateral heirs of Mrs. Bradshaw, against the insurance company, and in the petition plaintiffs averred, not only the foregoing-facts, but also the fact of the inheritance of the farm by W. C. Satterfield’s daughter and granddaughter in equal proportions., and that it could not be divided without impairing its value and the value of each interest, and especially so because of the indebtedness against it, and the prayer of the petition was for a sale of the farm for division of the net proceeds after the payment of the before mentioned indebtedness . against it. Out of abundant caution, an appointed surveyor platted the farm into the only subdivisions that could be made of it, which were three parts, and the final judgment ordered the commissioner to offer at the sale he was directed to make the three divisions so made by the surveyor separately and to then offer the farm as a whole and to accept the largest price. At the sale, the appellant, Thomas L. Clark, being the highest bidder, 'became the purchaser at the price of $20,860; it having been appraised at $19,725.

Bonds were executed by appellant, the purchaser, as directed in the order of sale, and a complete report *603 thereof was subsequently filed by the master commissioner who made it, whereupon appellant as such purchaser filed exceptions to the report, the grounds of which will be disposed of in reverse order, and they were and are: (1) Error in the description of the tract of land ordered to be sold; (2) failure to introduce legal proof of the indivisibility of the farm; and (3) that the judgment of sale was and is void, because the petition, in addition to seeking division of the farm between its adult and infant joint owners, also sought settlement relief of the estates of both Mrs. Bradshaw and W. O. Satterfield, by reason of which it was necessary for the infant joint owner to be made a defendant in the cause and duly summoned with representation by properly appointed guardian ad litem.

Differently stated, this ground of exception was that, because the action sought incidental and collateral relief by praying for a discharge of the incumbrances upon the farm in addition to the division of its net proceeds, it was one brought, eithér under the provisions of section 428 of the Civil Code of Practice, or under subsection 1 of section 489 of the same Code—i. e., for the payment of debts of the infant’s ancestors, W. C. Satterfield and Mrs. Bradshaw—and that in both of such actions it is a mandatory prerequisite to their validity that the infant owner or owners of the land should be made a defendant or defendants and_ properly summoned in the cause, and which is undoubtedly true if this (3) alleged ground of exception be true. See cases of Whalen v. Hopper, 152 Ky. 727, 154 S. W. 40; Hicks v. Winn, 198 Ky. 192, 248 S. W. 499; Bowles v. Bowles, 211 Ky. 250, 277 S. W. 260; and other .cases referred to in those opinions, wherein this court prescribed the mandatory rule of practice that an infant owner of land in actions to sell it under section 428 or under subsection 1 of 489 should be made a defendant and not a plaintiff either by itself or by statutory guardian alone, and that, unless so done, the judgment and order of sale would be void.

However, in the cases of Bacon v. Bills, 6 Ky. Law Rep. 218; Henning v. Barringer, 10 S. W. 136, 10 Ky. Law Rep. 674; Power v. Power, 15 S. W. 523, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 793; Smith v. Leavill, 29 S. W. 319, 16 Ky. Law Rep. 609; Moore v. Potter-Matlock Trust Co., 167 Ky. 201, 180 S. W. 789; Baker v. Weaks, 178 Ky. 515, 199 S. W. 53, L. R. A. 1918C, 152; and Scott v. Graves, 153 Ky. 221, 154 S. W. 1084, we held that, in an action brought under *604 either subsection of section 490 of the Civil Code of Practice for the purpose of dividing land partly owned by an infant, or under its subsection 2 for its sale for division, it was not necessary for the infant owner or owners to be made defendants and duly summoned and defense made for them in the cause, but that the action could be maintained in the name of the infant as plaintiff by his statutory guardian or by such guardian alone, and that the contrary rule supra, with reference to proceedings under section 428 and subsection 1 of 489, did not apply to actions brought under section 490 of the Code.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W.2d 516, 233 Ky. 600, 1930 Ky. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-satterfields-administrator-kyctapphigh-1930.