180 Ky. 518 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1918
Opinion of the Court by
Dismissing; the first appeal,and affirming the second one.
John B. Auxier died intestate a resident of Johnson county, Kentucky, in 1891. Prior to- his death he divided his lands in that county, except some mineral interests hereafter to be noticed, among his eight children, except one daughter, to whom he gave nothing, but required all his other seven children to make her whole out of other landed interests which he owned in Martin county, Kentucky. The division of the lands so made was not
At the time of his death John B. Auxier owned a one-half undivided interest of the minerals in and to a tract of land in Johnson county containing two hundred acres, and a one-half interest in and to three tracts of laud in Martin county, one of them containing two hundred and eighty acres and the other two fifty acres each, and the entire interest in two other tracts in that county containing fifty-eight and seventy-four acres, respectively. The Martin county lands, as above stated, were charged with the payment to John B. Auxier’s daughter, Angelina Preston, of the sum of $160.00, to equalize her with the other children to whom the decedent had conveyed land.
After the death of S. B. Auxier his widow moved to Lawrence county, Kentucky, to . the residence of her father, A. J. Webb, and the latter was appointed by the county court of that county guardian for her three infant children. In 1896, when the wards were aged seven, eight and ten years, respectively, the guardian filed the first suit above in the Johnson circuit court, making his wards and the heirs of John B. Auxier defendants. In his petition, after alleging’ his appointment and qualification as guardian, he averred that his wards inherited the one hundred acres of land located in Johnson county deeded to their father, S. B. Auxier, by their grandfather, John B. Auxier, and one-eighth of an undivided one-half interest in the minerals contained in the two hundred acres of land owned in that county, and a like interest in the first three tracts located in Martin county, and a one-eighth undivided interest in the last two mentioned tracts in that county; that they had no personal property, and it was necessary to sell their lands for the purpose of educating and maintaining the children and that none of it was productive; that it would be to the interest of the wards to sell all of it for the purposes of reinvest-, ment, and he further alleged that S. B. Auxier, through whom his wards as his heirs obtained their interest, was indebted to the estate of John B. Auxier in the sum of
The heirs of John B. Auxier other than the children of S. B. Auxier filed an answer and counterclaim in the suit in which they set up the facts hereinbefore recited and asked that the Martin county land belonging to John B. Auxier be sold for the purpose of settling his estate, and that out of the proceeds Angelina Preston be first paid $160.00, and that out .of S. B. Auxier’s interest his indebtedness to his father’s estate be paid and the balance, if any, after paying the cost, be subject to the orders of the court.
The case was referred to the master commissioner to take proof of the assets and liabilities of both the estates of S. B. and John B. Auxier, and to ascertain the indebtedness of the former to the latter, and to ascertain and report all facts necessary for the court to make an intelligent settlement of the matters involved. After the order of reference the Hon. A. J. Auxier was elected judge of the Johnson circuit court at the regular election in 1897, and he declined to sit in the case because of relationship to the parties. Whereupon, in obedience to the law then prevailing in this state upon the subject, the bar elected the Hon. B. L. Davis as special judge to preside in that case. In the meantime, some interlocutory orders had been made, none of which disposed of any meritorious question, and on February 23, 1899, when the special judge was elected, he entered the judgment appealed from, in which he ordered enough of the Martin county land sold to pay the amount adjudged to Angelina Preston, and that the undivided interest in the remainder of those lands, being the part inherited by S. B. Auxier from his father, be sold to pay the indebted
In the meantime, the Consolidation Coal Company became and is now the owner of the mineral interest sold in the two-hundred-acre tract of land in Johnson county, and the "Williams Coal Company became and is now the owner of the mineral in the one-hundred-acre tract of land in that county, the surface being owned by others.
The appeal in the first case above is from the judgment rendered therein on February 23,1899, wherein the sales of the Martin county lands were ordered, and which
In the latter suit the facts above recited are alleged, and it is charged that the judgments rendered in the suit brought by A. J. Webb, guardian of appellants, are null and void, and plaintiffs in the new suit (being the second one above) seek to ignore the sales made under such judgments and to recover from the defendants all of the interest sold thereunder.
Many grounds are urged against the validity of the judgment in the first suit, but we do not deem any of them of sufficient importance to demand our consideration except, first, (a) that the first judgment rendered in the Webb suit by the special judge, B. L. Davis, was not signed on the record by him, but that it was prepared on a separate piece of paper and signed by the special judge and afterwards it and the judge’s signature thereto were recorded upon the order book, and (b), that when the second judgment was rendered by the special judge in that ■suit in-May, 1899, under which the Johnson county lands were sold, there was no re-election of the special judge, he acting under his election and qualification which occurred at the preceding February term of the court. Sec- ■ ond: That the court had no authority to order the sale of only the infants’ undivided interest which they inherited from their father, S. B. Auxier, in any of the land in either of the counties.
In the case of Ewell v. Jackson, supra, it was held that although the judge rendering the judgment signed the paper upon which it was written, and which was afterwards recorded upon the order books of the court, this was not sufficient to comply with the rules, supra, and such signing by the judge would not render the judgment valid unless he signed the record. Another rule equally well established is that if the record or the papers in the cause furnish evidence that a particular judgment was in fact rendered, the regular judge of that court at any succeeding time, after notice and in a proper proceeding, might legally enter the judgment nunc pro tunc, or in the same way make any order or do any act that might be necessary to effectuate now what was in fact done then. Ewell v. Jackson, supra; Chester v. Craves, 159 Ky. 244; and Rogers v. Bigstaff’s Ex’r, 176 Ky. 413.
After the second suit above was brought, the defendants therein, after due notice, procured an order re-docketing the first suit and asked that the then presiding judge of the court sign the judgment rendered in the latter case nunc pro time, which motion, after hearing, was sustained and the judgment rendered in that case on February 23, 1899, was signed by the Hon. A. J. Kirk, the regular judge of the Johnson circuit court, before whom the motion was made. The proceeding for the nunc pro tone order was regular, and the record furnished amply sufficient evidence that the ineffectual judgment had been rendered, and the court under the authorities was fully justified in sustaining the motion .for the nunc pro tunc entry. This, under the cases referred to, rendered the 1899 judgment effectual from the beginning and cured the defect caused by the judge who rendered it not signing the record.
The second ground urged for holding the judgment in the Webb case and the consequent sales thereunder void because only the undivided interest of S. B. Auxier was ordered sold is based upon the contention that the court should have ordered the sale of the entire tracts and not the undivided interest which the infants inherited from their father, S. B. Auxier, and in support of that contention we are referred to the case of Williamson v. Mann, 134 Ky. 63. In that case, however, the suit in which the order of sale was obtained was brought under the provisions of section 490 of the Civil Code of Practice, and it was held that the court was without authority in that character of suit, where the land was indivisible and the share of the infants was worth more than $100.00, to sell any less quantity of the land than the whole. But the sales here complained of were made for the purpose of satisfying the debts of S. B. Auxier under allegations in the pleadings, sufficient for that purpose, and, as stated in the pleadings, for the purpose of settling the estate of S. B. Auxier and paying his debts. The master
In the case of Marcum v. Marcum, 177 Ky. 186, it was held that a creditor could not procure the sale of any more than his debtor’s joint interest in indivisible property, and in the opinion two former ones by this court holding to the same rule were referred to, they being, Hill v. Cornwall, 95 Ky. 512, and Greenbaum v. Commonwealth, 147 Ky. 450. In the Marcum case, after approving, the other two, it is said:
“Under this rule the court was in error when it ordered the entire tract of land in controversy sold. It should have ordered to be sold only the one-third undivided interest of the husband, William Marcum.” We still adhere to the soundness of those opinions.
In the instant case the heirs of John B. Auxier, with his administrator, asserted the claim against S. B. Auxier, which was afterwards reported by the master commissioner and confirmed by the court. The guardian in his petition also asked for the payment of S. B. Auxier’s debts, and while the pleadings were somewhat irregularly drawn so as to make the action a settlement suit under the provisions of section 428 of the Civil Code, we think they were sufficient for that purpose, and when land was ordered sold for the payment of S. B. Auxier’s debts, no greater interest should have been sold than that which he owned. This the court did, and the same is true with reference to his undivided interest in the mineral under the two hundred-acre tract located in Johnson county.
It is true that in the three cases referred to no infants appear to be involved. In this case the infants stand in the shoes of their father, whose undivided interest was sold for his debt, and we can discern no sufficient reason for withholding the application of the rule because the debtor may perchance be dead and leave infants surviving him. The reasons for not disturbing the interest of the other joint owners in the land are as potent in the one case as they are in the other. The sale of the other two tracts of the Martin county lands of fifty-eight and seventy-four acres, respectively, was made as a whole for the purpose of realizing a sum sufficient to pay Angelina Preston’s claim against her
For the reasons stated, we are unable to agree with counsel that the judgment and sale of the undivided interest complained of was unauthorized, or that the judgment to that extent was invalid.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.