175 Ky. 570 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
While the purchaser filed numerous exceptions to the report of sale, the only exception now relied on is that the infant defendants were not properly served with process.
Section 52 of the 'Civil Code is as follows:
“If the defendant be under the age of fourteen years the summons must be served on his father, or, if he have no father, on his guardian ■, or, if he have no guardian, m his mother, or, if he have no mother, on the person having charge of him.
“If any of the parties upon whom summons is directed to be served by this section is a plaintiff, then it shall be served on the person who stands first in the order named in said section, and who is not a plaintiff; and if all such persons are plaintiffs, it shall, on the affidavit of one or more of them showing that fact, be the duty of the clerk of the court to appoint a guardian ad litem for the infant, and the summons shall be served on such guardian.”
The mother of the infants died several years before this suit was brought. Upon her death their father placed the infants in charge of their uncle, Joe B. Preston, and moved to Utah, where he now resides. Thereafter, Joe B. Preston qualified as statutory guardian of the infants, who are now living with him. These facts having been made to appear by the affidavit of the plaintiff, the clerk appointed a guardian ad litem for the infants, and summons was served on him. Since the infants were both under the age of fourteen years and their father .was living and not a plaintiff, it is argued that, under the plain provision of the code, they could be brought before the court only by the service of a summons on their father. While it is true that the code, in prescribing the order of service, does not in terms provide for service on any other person where the next person in order is a non-resident of the state, we think it clear that the legislature did not intend to require the
Judgment affirmed.