131 Ky. 494 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
T. E. Stratton' and! R. Y. Stratton, his brother, owned jointly a tract of 172 acres of land in Shelby county. T. E. Stratton died on March 2, 1907, and R. Y. Stratton died on September 14,1907. They left surviving them a sister, Mary Stratton, a brother, J. C. Stratton, a lunatic brother, Jackson Stratton, and six nephews and nieces, the children, of a deceased brother. T. E. Stratton left a will by which he devised his half of the land to his sister, Mary, for life, and at her death to two of the nephews, E.
Section 53 of the Civil Code of Practice provides, among other things, as follows: “If the defendant be of unsound mind the summons must be served on him and on one of the following named persons, if residing in the county, viz: On his committee; or, if he have no committee, on his father ; or, if he have no father, on his guardian; or, if he have no guardian, on his wife; or, if he have no wife on the person having charge of him.” The lunatic, Jackson Stratton, was confined in an asylum. He had no father or guardian or wife. The person having charge of him was the superintendent of the asylum. The process was served on the lunatic, and no one else. The service of the process on the lunatic in the asylum, without service on any other person named in the statute, did hot bring him before the court, or give the court jurisdiction over him. He not being before the court, the order of the court appointing a guardian ad litem for him was unauthorized, and the report of the guardian ad litem added nothing to the unauthorized proceeding. The lunatic, Jackson Stratton, is not before the court, and the exceptions of the purchaser to the sale on this ground should have been sustained. The words “if residing in the county” in section 53 refer to the county where the person of unsound mind is at the time he is served. Otherwise the summons could rarely be
.There is another defect in the proceeding. Doss, as personal representative when there were no debts to be paid out of the real estate, had no interest in the sale of the land or the division of the proceeds among the heirs at law. Miary Stratton, E. B. Stratton and R. E. Stratton, when their part of the land was allotted to them, bad no interest whatever in the remainder of the tract, which was allotted to the infants, the lunatic, and two other persons. By section 490 of the Civil Code of Practice a vested estate in real property jointly owned by two or more persons may be sold, in an action brought by either of them, if the estate be in possession, and the property can not be divided without materially impairing its value or the value of the plaintiff’s interest therein. But here the plaintiffs had no interest whatever in the land ordered to be sold, and to allow a person Who has no interest in the land to procure a sale would be a palpable abuse of the statute. It is true that J. C. Stratton, who did own an interest in the land, filed an answer, in which he joined in the prayer of the petition, but there was no process on this pleading. The sale was not made on any proceeding instituted by him. It is a familiar rule that the court has
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, for further proceedings consistent herewith.