121 Kan. 212 | Kan. | 1926
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The word plaintiffs will be used to designate the actual plaintiffs and two persons associated in interest with them, who were made defendants. The plaintiffs brought this action to quiet title to a tract of land. . The land was formerly owned by Olaf Peterson. The defendants assert title through a deed to Hannah Heasley from Olaf Peterson personally and as guardian of his insane wife, by order of the probate court, and also through a decree of the district court quieting the title so obtained. The plaintiffs claim as heirs of Olaf Peterson and his wife and contend that the conveyance under which the defendants claim was void because at the time of its execution the land was the homestead of Olaf Peterson and his wife, and could not be alienated without her consent, which could not be given because of her insanity. The plaintiffs in a reply pleaded that the order of the probate court and the decree of the district court were obtained by collusion and fraud. The plaintiffs introduced evidence, a demurrer to which was sustained, and they appeal from that ruling.
The evidence was addressed solely to the proposition that the land was occupied as a homestead by Olaf Peterson and his wife, and that while this condition existed she was insane and so continued until her death. No attempt was made to establish fraud in procuring the order of sale from the probate judge or the judgment of the district court quieting title, unless the evidence of the homestead character of the land, and the fact of the wife’s insanity can be regarded as intended to have that effect, in which case it failed of its purpose. The evidence may have established that the judgment quieting title (to speak of the later adjudication, which is conclusive of the rights of the parties unless set aside) was erroneous — was‘ based on a mistaken view of the facts or of the law, but this would not render it void. There is some difference of judicial opinion as to whether, in the absence .of a statute to that effect, a person who has been declared insane may be sued. (14 R. C. L. 613; 32 C. J. 765.) In this state, however, such procedure is authorized. (R. S. 39-225, 60-408.) At the time of the action in which the decree quieting title
The petition alleged title in the plaintiffs and the invalidity of the deed under which the defendants claim. The defendants in their answer set out the decree quieting title. The plaintiffs’ reply alleged the decree was obtained by collusion and fraud. The defendants suggest the attack on the decree is not direct. Assuming the attack to be direct, it fails for want of evidence. The fraud for which a judgment can be set aside in a separate action is extrinsic fraud. The evidence did not show that the court which rendered the decree quieting title was induced by false testimony to believe the land was not a homestead, but such a showing would have been insufficient because establishing merely intrinsic fraud. (Huls v. Gafford Lumber & Grain Co., 120 Kan. 209, 243 Pac. 306.) A judgment is not to be vacated upon a mere showing in a new action that the actual facts did not warrant it. An error of fact or law does not constitute a lack of jurisdiction, nor tend to show fraud. In this state even a judgment based on a petition which states no cause of action is not void and is enforceable unless set aside in some method recognized by the law. (Investment Co. v. Wyandotte County, 86 Kan. 708, 121 Pac. 1097.) The question whether an attack on a judgment is direct or collateral is often helpful in determining whether it should succeed, but even a direct attack cannot avail against a judgment which is not void, unless made in an authorized time and manner. (See note, 23 A. S. R. 104, 106.)
The judgment is affirmed.