119 Ky. 256 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion of the court by
Reveesing.
On the 21st day of September, 1895, Eliza Miller and her husband, Chess Miller, executed a mortgage to Helen Schwabacher upon a small house and lot belonging to Eliza, to secure the payment of a note for $250, which was executed for loaned money. On the 25th of February, 1897, Eliza Miller died intestate. Shortly after the death of Eliza, Chess Miller married again, and occupied the property with his third wife until his death, on the 19th of December, 1902. He was survived by his third wife and a daughter, Sallie Bethel, a daughter of his first wife, who was in no wise related to his second wife, Eliza Miller. After the death of Chess Miller, Helen Schwabadier brought this action against the surviving widow, Mary Miller, and the daughter, Sallie Bethel, and her husband, to collect her debt, and asked an enforcement of the mortgage lien which had been executed to her to secure its payment. In addition to the usual allegations! of such petition, ihe plaintiff further alleged “that Eliza Miller left no heirs or kindred of any kind or degree surviving her, and that the property descended under the statute to her husband, Chess Miller.” The defendants filed; no answer, and in July, 1903, a judgment was rendered directing the sale of the property to secure the plaintiff’s debt, and also several tax liens due the city of Louisville. At the sale which was made pursuant to this judgment, the appellant, W. S. Montz, bought the property at the price of $775. After the sale, hut before the confirmation thereof, Sallie Bethel died, leaving surviving her four children. Her death was suggested, and motion made to revive the ac
In support of the first exception, our attention is called to the fact ihat the order was to revive the action against the real representative of the defendant, under section 507' of the Civil Code of Practice, whilst the contention is made that it should have been to revive the judgment under subsection 3, section 407, of the Civil Code of Practice. We can not agree with this contention. The judgment had been executed-by a sale of the property, and the report of the master commissioner to’the court, and no further step was to be taken under it. The question was as to the revivor of the action, and we think the order to revive the action was properly had, as directed by section 507 of the Civil Code of Practice.
The second exception raises a more serious question. The only claim of the defendants to the real estate left by Eliza Miller is as heirs at law of the husband, Chess Miller; and he did not inherit the property under the statute, except under the rare contingency that his deceased wife did not leave surviving her kindred in either paternal or maternal