161 Ky. 68 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1914
Opinion of the Court by
— Reversing.
William Johnson died intestate on January 8, 1890, the owner of a tract of land in Knott County on the waters of Troublesome Creek. His widow, Nancy, and his son, Leslie, then an infant four months old, survived him. Decedent was also survived by his father, Leslie Johnson, Sr., his mother, Frances, and his sister, Kate Sarver.
During the year 1891, Leslie Johnson, Sr., and Frances Johnson, father and mother of William Johnson, brought suit in the Knott Circuit court against William Johnson’s widow and child to enforce an alleged title bond claimed to have been executed by William Johnson to his mother, Frances. Specific performance was decreed, and a commissioner’s deed was subsequently made conveying the title of the widow and child to Frances Johnson. Frances Johnson died during the year 1901. She devised the land to her husband for life, remainder to her daughter, Kate Sarver. Subsequently John Fugate and Ella Fugate purchased the land from Leslie Johnson, Sr., and Kate Sarver.
At the March, 1913, term of the Knott Circuit Court, Leslie Miah Johnson, son of William Johnson, entered a
Some time after the death of her husband, William Johnson, his widow, Nancy, married Frank Ashley. Leslie Miah Johnson’s father being dead, and he being under fourteen years of age, it was necessary that process be served on him by delivering copy thereof to his mother. Section 52, Civil Code. Nancy Ashley testifies that no process was ever served on her, and she and other witnesses say that she had moved away from Troublesome Creek to the home of her father two years before the suit was filed, She claims that she knew of the suit several years before she testified, and says that when she left her husband’s farm she told Leslie Johnson to take care of his grandson. Notwithstanding the testimony of Nancy Ashley that no process was ever served on her, the order books of the court show that she and her husband, Frank Ashley, filed an answer to the original action on April 8, 1895. The order books also show that P. H. Creer, a practicing attorney, filed an answer as guardian ad litem for the infant defendant, Leslie Miah Johnson. On the same day judgment was rendered directing the master commissioner of the court to convey to plaintiffs the land described in the title bond. The judgment itself contains the following recitation:
“This cause having been submitted to the court for its opinion and judgment upon the pleadings, proof and exhibits herein filed, it appearing to the court that the infant defendant, Leslie Miah Johnson, was duly served with process herein previous to the former term of this court by delivering of a copy of a summons herein to Ms mother, with whom the said infant resided, it being
While it is true that a party may have a judgment vacated on the ground that he was not served with process, it is also well settled that he who seeks to have this done assumes the burden of proving the fact essential to entitle him to the relief asked. Smith v. McClure, 146 Ind., 123; Johnson v. Nash-Wright Co., 121 Iowa, 173; Smith v. Black, 51 Md., 247. It is also the rule that in such a proceeding presumptions will be indulged, requiring evidence to overcome them, of the regularity and validity of proceedings in the case anterior to judgment, and of the correctness of recitals in the record. Whitney v. Daggett, 108 Cal., 232, 41 Pac., 471; Whitfield v. Howard, 12 S. Dak., 355, 81 N. W., 727; Barra v. People, 18 Colo. App., 16, 69 Pac., 1074.
Here we have a case where the papers were either lost or destroyed. A motion is made eighteen years after the rendition of the judgment to have it set aside. The order books show that a guardian ad litem was appointed, and answered for the infant defendant. The code provides that no appointment of a guardian ad litem shall be made until the defendant' is summoned, or until a person is summoned for him as authorized by Section 52. In view of this provision of the Code, there is a presumption, not conclusive of course on a direct attack, but sufficient to make out a prima, facie case of the service of process. Not only so, but the judgment itself recites that the infant defendant was duly served
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.