163 Ky. 551 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The appellees are infants and this is a suit in equity in their behalf ag’ainst their guardian, Jones, and Benjamin Maiden to secure relief against a sale of their remainder interest in real estate which was sold under order of court apparently for re-investment.
A great man> statements are made in the petition, and many more in the brief. The parties recognize the 'fact that no intelligent idea of the purpose of the proceedings or the extent of the relief to which the infants are entitled can be ascertained from the petition alone. Por reasons to be stated, the judgment must be reversed, but with directions to the lower court to have the pleadings so reformed that tangible issues may be presented and the rights of the infants definitely settled. The court overruled demurrer to the petition, and, defendants declining to answer, the judgment now complained of was rendered. Defendants insist that the demurrer should have been sustained.
We gather this much from the petition: Isaac Stewart owned eight lots in the town of Pineville. He died intestate in 1909, and left five children, the appellees, surviving him. Three of them were infants and two were adults. Prom the briefs we understand he left a widow, who remarried. H. B. Jones qualified as guardian for the three infants, and brought a suit to have the lots sold and the proceeds re-invested. Then follow certain allegations reflecting upon the integrity of the guardian, and a statement that the court ordered a sale, and the lots brought $500. Jones collected the purchase
It is alleged that on January 26th, 1912, Maiden filed a suit seeking to reform the deed which he had executed to Jones, as guardian, and asking also for a judgment on his purchase money notes and enforcement of his lien on the land. The petition in the present case does not disclose the errors, and we are left in ignorance as to the amount of purchase money claimed. It is alleged that the court refused to make any corrections in the deed, but did render a personal judgment against the infants for the purchase money, and ordered a sale of the land, and that it brought only $225 at the sale. It is also alleged that Maiden agreed with one of the adult children at the time he sold the land to Jones that he- would cut enough, timber from the land to pay the purchase money balance. It is said that he did cut the timber, but failed to credit or satisfy the notes.
In the prayer they ask that the guardian be required to produce receipts showing disbursement of the money coming into his hands as guardian, and that the deed from Benjamin Maiden to the infants be set aside, and that Maiden be required to restore to the Stewart children all of the money paid to him by their guardian, and also certain costs expended in the action above referred to. As already stated, general demurrer was filed to the petition. The court overruled it, and, the defendants refusing to answer, the court entered judgment against them canceling the deed executed by Maiden to Jones as guardian, and adjudging that Maiden pay to Jones, as guardian, the sum of $341.50. The children were also adjudged to recover the cost expended in the other actions referred to, as well as in this one, and they were
The court did not err in overruling the demurrer, for there were allegations showing that the infants were entitled to some relief. It is alleged that Maiden had agreed to and did cut enough timber from the land to pay the purchase money balance, and the proceedings with reference to the sale and re-investment are so in conflict with the code requirements as to make them void.
A sale of infant’s realty for purpose of re-investment is permitted by Section 491 of the code. If the bond mentioned in Sub-section 1 of Section 493 .is not executed, Sub-section 5 of that section requires the court, by its commissioner, to retain the custody and control of the fund realized by the sale until it is re-invested in real estate. Sales where a bond is required are void unless the bond is executed, or the proceeds so preserved. Barnett v. Bull, 81 Ky., 127; Elliott v. Fowler, 112 Ky., 376.
A sale of infant’s realty for re-investment where no bond is executed is defenseless-, and this is true also if the proceeds are collected and re-invested without authority or direction of the court. In this case, the statutory guardian took the money without executing another bond and made the purchase from Maiden. There is no warrant for this under the code. ‘While- it is not shown whether the court confirmed the sale of the infants’ land or authorized the guardian to purchase the land from Maiden, and while, in construing a pleading, the ordinary presumption would be that the court did confirm or authorize such transactions, yet if the court did order or approve a sale without a bond, and -direct a re-investment of this kind — that is, one where all of the infants’ money was only sufficient to pay half of the purchase price — it would certainly be unwise practice and erroneous under the rule with reference to preservation of the estates of infants. Manifestly, the personal judgment against the infants should be set aside.
From the- statements made in the petition Jones, the guardian, was derelict in his duties, and, therefore, the
The appellant complains that the adult, Will Stewart, who, sued as next friend for the infants, failed to Tie an affidavit as required by Section 37 of the code, showing his right to sue. This could only be reached by special demurrer, and the objection was waived by the general demurrer. Prichard v. Peace, 98 Ky., 99; Walton v. Washburn, 23 Ky. L. R., 1008, 64 S. W., 634; Hall v. Snipes, 10 Ky. L. R., 435, 9 S. W., 388; Henning v. Barringer, 10 Ky. L. R., 674, 10 S. W., 136.
The allegations with reference to the amount paid by Jones to Maiden are too indefinite to support the judgment of the court as to the refund of it.
The judgment for sale of the land cannot be enforced in the absence of a description of it. For these reasons the judgment must be reversed, but the plaintiffs will be given an opportunity to amend and set up their rights in tangible form.