This action was instituted in the circuit court of Dunklin County to set aside the decree rendered in a certain cause in said court on the 24th day of January, 1896, and to reinstate said original cause and to permit-the plaintiffs in this case to answer and defend against the same. Trial was had resulting
The petition in the present suit was in two counts, the first count seeking the relief above mentioned and the second count being in ejectment. Plaintiffs, in the first count of the petition, allege in substance that the plaintiff in the original suit was not entitled to recover therein, but that they have a good and sufficient defense to his claim for specific performance of a contract to convey said land to him, and further alleged that the day before the case was tried the plaintiff in said original suit was permitted to amend his original petition by changing the description of the land therein mentioned and that the amendment entirely changed the cause of action, and that no additional service was had upon said minor defendants after said amended petition was filed, and that for that reason said original decree was null and void and had no binding force or effect upon said minor defendants (these plaintiffs). The petition further alleged that the original petition. showed on its face that the cause of action was barred by laches and failed to allege that any demand for performance had been made by the plaintiff upon the person with whom he contracted for the purchase of said land.
The answer filed in the present' suit was a general denial. At the request of the plaintiffs in the present
“Come now plaintiffs herein in person and by counsel and the defendants in person and by counsel, and this case is taken up and submitted to the court, and the court proceeds to hear the evidence and to determine the rights of the parties in this case, and after hearing the evidence and a motion having been filed asking! separate findings of law and facts, the court finds:
“That at the January term of the Dunklin County Circuit Court, 1894, in si certain case wherein O. B. Harris was plaintiff, and Mollie A. Shelton, formerly Mollie A. Cashion, widow of decedent Cashion, below mentioned, Charles E. Cashion, a minor, James F. Cashion, a minor, and Audrey Bell Cashion, a minor, heirs of James F. Cashion, were defendants, a certain bill in equity, the general nature of which was for specific performance of a contract to convey real estate ■arid to divest title to the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twenty-five, township eighteen north, of range nine east, in Dunklin County, Missouri, out of the defendants and to vest same in the plaintiff, came on to be heard, plaintiff alleging, among other things in his petition, that James F. Cashion, deceased, father of the minor defendants and former husband of said Mollie A. Shelton, had sold the land in dispute to O. B. Harris, during his (decedent’s) lifetime, and had placed him, said Harris, in possession of said premises, and that full payment for said land had been made by said Harris, but that the said James F. Cashion de*74 parted this life in April, 1901, without making the said O. B. Harris a deed for said land.
‘ ‘ The court further finds that the defendants were properly summoned into court; that Hon. W. S. C. Walker was appointed guardian ad litem for all the minors, and that he filed his acceptance and answer in said cause; that the original petition misdescribed the land in question as the southeast frl. quarter of section thirty-four, township eighteen, range nine, Dunklin County, Missouri. That afterwards and prior to the submission of said cause and prior to the rendition of judgment thereon, the plaintiff, by leave of court, amended his petition correctly describing the lands in question as the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twenty-five, township' eighteen, range nine, Dunklin County, Missouri. The court further finds that the defendants were duly summoned into court and duly represented by W. S. C. Walker as guardian ad litem, that a judgment was regularly rendered at the January term of the Dunklin County Circuit Court, 1896, in said cause, which said judgment is as follows:
“ ‘O. B. Harris, Plaintiff, vs. Mollie A. Shelton et ah, Defendants — No. 904.
• “ ‘Comes now O. B. Harris, plaintiff, in person as well as by attorney, and Mollie A. Shelton, widow of Jas. M. Cashion, deceased, Chas. E. Cashion, Jas. P. Cashion and Audrey Bell Cashion, minors, by attorney and guardian ad litem and this case is taken up for trial and the court proceeds to hear, try and determine the rights of this suit, and after hearing the evidence doth find that prior to the death of said Jas. M. Cashion, the plaintiff, O. B. Harris, did purchase and pay for the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section twenty-five, township eighteen north, of range nine, and the court further finds from the evidence that for and in consideration of the said sum of three hundred and forty dollars, which amount said plaintiff*75 was to pay .and did pay for the lands as herein described, the said Jas. M. Cashion was to make to the said O. B. Harris, plaintiff herein, a good and sufficient deed, and the court further finds from the evidence that the said Jas. M. Cashion did put the plaintiff, the said O. B. Harris, in possessiqn of the land as herein described, but failed to make, execute and deliver to the said plaintiff the deed which the said Jas. M. Cashion promised to make, execute and deliver; therefore it is ordered and adjudged by the court that the rights, benefits and title in and to the land herein described, as against the party defendants or their assigns, are hereby decreed in plaintiff'and that he have of and recover from the defendants, his costs in this behalf expended.’
“The court further finds that in the obtaining of the judgment by plaintiff in said former action against the plaintiffs herein, there was no fraud or collusion, nor is any charged by the petition. The action is bottomed upon the alleged lack of jurisdiction in the Dunklin County Circuit Court to permit said amendment of the description of the said land involved.
“The court further finds that, prior to the death of plaintiffs’ ancestor, James F. Cashion, and to-wit, about the month of January, 1889, said Harris entered into possession of the lands in controversy, and that said Harris or the defendant and his mesne■ grantors, who claim title to the land under the sale to said Harris and under the decree set out above herein, has been in possession of said land since about January, 1889, continuously, and that defendant is now in possession of the same.
“From the above facts, the court concludes, as a matter of law, that in the absence of fraud, or collusion (which neither is pleaded or relied upon) and. in the absence of irregularities in summons or judgment or other jurisdictional fact, the-mere fact that after infant defendants were duly in court, and being*76 there represented by a duly appointed guardian ad litem, the court permitted an amendment to be made changing the description of the land touching which specific performance to convey was sought by the action, will not render the judgment 'void as to such infants, and that the same is valid and binding, and that the judgment and finding of the court should be for the defendants, upon both counts of the petition.
■ “It is therefore ordered, considered and adjudged By the court that plaintiffs take nothing by their suit, that defendants g’o hence without day; that the costs in this case be adjudged against the plaintiffs, and that execution may issue therefor. ”
OPINION.
Concerning this point, it is sufficient to say that appellants’ petition alleged that said minors “were duly served to appear” in the original suit and that the court in said cause duly “appointed Hon. W. S. C. Walker as'guardian ad litem for said minors” and that said W. S. C. Walker “filed his acceptance as guardian ad litem” and appeared in said cause and was by the court granted leave to plead on or before the first day of the next term of said court. Appellant should not be heard to challenge the court’s finding of facts which stand admitted by their own pleading. Furthermore, the decree in the original suit recites that said minors, naming them, did appear by their guardian ad litem, upon the trial and at the hearing of the evidence in said cause.
The amendment, to which reference is here made, consisted of correcting an error in the description of the land involved. The land was described erroneously in the first petition, and the plaintiff, by leave of court, made an amendment by changing the erroneous description to a correct description. This was not such an amendment as changed the cause of action and the amendment was properly permitted to be made. [Sec. 1848, R. S. 1909; Callaghan v. M’Mahan,
The amendment made being entirely permissible and not such as to amount to a departure from the cause of action originally stated, it was unnecessary that there should have been further service of summons upon the minor defendants. They had been duly served with summons, a guardian ad litem had been duly appointed and he had filed his written acceptance of his appointment and appeared in the case. The court was thereby given jurisdiction of the persons of said minors, and the judgment thereinafter rendered was binding upon them. The evidence fully supported the judgment of the trial court and it should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
PER CURIAM. — The foregoing opinion by.Williams, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
