277 S.W. 466 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
Affirming.
On February 22, 1921, Will Sparks conveyed to Wiley Joseph a tract of land in Leslie county, reserving the mineral. On February 3, 1922, Wiley Joseph brought this suit against John M. Bailey and Will Sparks, alleging that he was the owner and in possession of the land and that the defendants were setting up some claim to it. He prayed that his title be quieted. On June 12, 1922, judgment by default was entered against the defendants quieting plaintiff's title to the tract of land. On May 20, 1924, Will Sparks, who lived in Perry county, filed a motion to vacate the judgment, showing that he had not been summoned in the action, did not enter his appearance thereto, did not learn of the judgment until about April 1, 1924, and had a good defense to the action; that the officer's return on the summons was procured to be made by Wiley Joseph by fraud or was made by mistake of the officer; that Bailey, who lived in Leslie county, had no interest in the land, and the allegation against him was only a pretense. He also filed the affidavit of the officer whose name was signed to the return, showing that he had not executed the summons on Sparks. On this showing, and there being no evidence that the process was ever sent to the sheriff of Perry county who made the return or was executed by him, the court sustained the motion and set aside the Judgment. Joseph appeals.
In Asher v. Cornett,
*396"A judgment vacating a former judgment, or refusing to vacate a former judgment and to grant a new trial, is final, and may be appealed from."
An order setting aside a final judgment at a subsequent term, like an order setting aside a deed, divests important rights and is therefore appealable, for it finally divests the party of all his rights under the deed or judgment.
It is insisted that the judgment is not warranted by the evidence. The proof in this case is practically the same as in Bramlett v. McVey,
The motion to set aside the judgment as void because rendered without service of process on the defendant was a direct proceeding to open the judgment and not a collateral attack. Gardner v. Howard,
Judgment affirmed.