3 S.W.2d 281 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1928
The petition alleges that judgment was rendered against plaintiff in favor of the East Side Packing Company on December 15, 1925, and that at that time she was a minor of the age of twenty years, and that no guardian ad litem was ever appointed by said justice, before whom the suit was brought, as provided for by the Statutes of Missouri; that she was an infant; that garnishment proceedings were instituted before the defendant, Henry Pfeffle, Justice of the Peace, looking toward the collection of this judgment out of her wages.
The defendant, East Side Packing Company, filed a separate answer, admitting the rendition of the judgment against the plaintiff, and denied the other allegations in the petition. The court granted an injunction enjoining the defendants from proceeding further toward the collection of the judgment, and an appeal was then taken to this court.
The sole question here on appeal is whether or not the pleadings will support the judgment rendered, or to state it in another way, it becomes only necessary to determine whether or not it was necessary for the justice of the peace to appoint a guardian ad litem for plaintiff, a woman of the age of twenty years, and whether or not a judgment *292 would be voidable rendered against such person without the appointment of a guardian ad litem.
While in some jurisdictions it has been held that a judgment obtained against a minor, not represented by a guardian adlitem, is absolutely void and subject to collateral attack, the law in this State is that a judgment rendered against an infant who was not represented by a guardian ad litem, is merely voidable, and may be nullified in a direct proceeding for that purpose. We think the injunction proceeding would be the proper remedy, and in fact, about the only remedy plaintiff could avail herself of under the facts of this case. Defendant cites the case of Audsley v. Hall,
The appellant also urges that a judgment cannot be impeached or set aside by plaintiff merely on the ground that she is an infant. Plaintiff is not attacking this judgment merely on the ground that she was an infant, but on the ground that she being an infant, was not represented by a guardian ad litem. The judgment against plaintiff seems to have been obtained in total disregard of the positive terms of the statute, and the judgment of the circuit court in granting the injunction was evidently proper. [Weiss v. Coudrey,