114 Ky. 659 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion of the coubt by
Reversing.
We are asked in this appeal to pass upon the sufficiency of the title of appellant Elizabeth Weller Blue to two lots situated on Indiana avenue, in tbe city of Louisville, which were allotted to her in the division of the estate of her mother, Sarah Weller, and which she has contracted to sell to the appellee, Rebecca Maney Waters. Sarah B. Weller, by will, which was duly probated in the Jefferson county court on the 13th day of July, 1900, after making provision for the payment of her debts, devised all the rest of her estate of every kind and description to her seven children, George P. Weller, Laura A. Sullivan, Elizabeth W. Blue, Mary B. Coldewey, John C. Weller, W. L. Weller and R. L. Weller, equally. After the execution of the will, and before the death of Sarah B. Weller, her daughter Mary B. Coldewey died leaving surviving her husband, William Coldewey, and two sons, Bernard and Anton Weller Coldewey, who were infants under 14 years of age. Her sons John C. and George P. Weller were appointed executors of the will. On the 3d day of December, 1900, the executors instituted a suit in equity in the Jefferson circuit court, making the other children and W.
Appellee defended, on the ground that the infants, not being parties to the partition suit, were? not devested by the judgment in that proceeding of their title to the lots, and made her answer a cross-petition against the infants and their statutory guardian, whom she alleged were nonresidents of the State, and asked that a warning order be issued notifying them of the proceeding. W. G-. Coldewey filed an answer as statutory guardian, in which, he says that the interest of his- wards was promoted by the allotment of the real estate to them instead of money, and asked that the partition made in the former proceeding be approved and confirmed. Upon final submission, the chancellor held that the title was not good, and dismissed her petition, and to reverse that judgment this appeal is prosecuted. The effect of the judgment in the partition suit was to invest a considerable proportion of the personal estate of the infants in realty.
Section 499 of the Civil Code reads as follows: “A person desiring a division of land held jointly with others or an allotment of dower, may file in the circuit court of the county in which the land, or a greater part thereof lies-, a petition containing a description of the land and statement of those having an interest in it, and the amount of such interest, with prayer for the division and allotment, and thereupon all persons interested in the property, who have not united in the petition shall be summoned to answer on the first day of the next term of the court. (2) The statutory guardian of an infant, committee of a person? of unsound mind, and husband of a married woman, may unite in the petition in the names of and in conjunc
This section of the Code clearly contemplates that, in a suit for the partition of real estate held jointly by infants and adults, the infants shall be parties to the proceeding, either as plaintiffs or defendants, in order to divest them of title. As they were not parties to the original suit filed by the executors against the other heirs and their father and statutory guardian, the judgment of partition in that proceeding was ineffectual to- pass their title to the real estate. But in this proceeding they were made defendants to the cross-petition of the defendant Waters, and are before the court by constructed service of process; and their father, as- statutory guardian, has filed an answer in which he says that the partition; of the real estate in the old suit was fair and advantageous to his wards, and that the investment of a part of their money in real estate was advantageous and beneficial to them. If this answer had been supplemented by other proof showing that the partition was fair and the investment of the money of the infants waá judicious and advantageous to them, the chancellor would have been justified in approving the partition in the old suit. In the case of Land Co. v. Elliott (12 R., 812) (15 S. W., 518), it was held that whilst infants were necessary parties to an action for partition of land held by them as joint tenants, and that a judgment of partition in. a suit to which they were not parties was1 erroneous, their statutory guardian, after they had been brought before the court, might in open court adopt the
For reasons indicated the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for additional proceedings consistent with this opinion.