29 S.W.2d 598 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1930
Affirming.
Litigation between the parties to this appeal has lasted for several years, and the case has been in this court on two former occasions. It originated in a contract for the conveyance of real estate. The action was commenced by Kelsey Taylor to enforce payment of a portion of the consideration due under the contract. Irvin Lowe defended on the ground that Taylor could not convey a good title. The objection to the title was that Kelsey Taylor had but a life estate in the property with remainder to his bodily heirs. The land had been conveyed to Kelsey by W.B. Taylor, and the deed, as it appeared on record, contained a provision to the effect that the estate conveyed to Kelsey Taylor was for life with remainder to his bodily heirs. Kelsey Taylor had instituted an action against W. B. Taylor to correct the record of the deed, claiming that the provision limiting *22
the estate had been stricken from the deed before it was executed, and that the recording of the stricken words was by mistake of the recording officer. The circuit court had rendered a judgment to accomplish the correction desired, but on the first appeal to this court that judgment was reversed. It was held that the relief could not be granted in an action by the life tenant against the grantor alone, since it was necessary that a representative of the remaindermen be a party in order that a valid judgment might be rendered. Lowe v. Taylor,
It was held in the opinion on the first appeal that the defense interposed by Lowe constituted a collateral *23
attack upon the judgment reforming the record of the deed and could not prevail unless the judgment was void. It was held, however, that the judgment was void because of the absence of indispensible parties. On the second appeal the second judgment was held void because the new party was not served with process as required by law. It is not now claimed that the last judgment rendered in the case of Taylor v. Taylor is void, but merely that the evidence upon which it was rested was not sufficiently clear and convincing to warrant the relief granted. But in a collateral attack we do not review the propriety of the judgment rendered or rejudge the merits on the proof adduced. In such cases we determine simply whether the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties so that a valid judgment could be pronounced. City of Owensboro v. Hardwick,
The judgment is affirmed. *24