150 S.W.2d 892 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1941
Affirming.
The Commonwealth and Jefferson County by and through the Commissioner of Revenue instituted this action under Section 4154-2, Kentucky Statutes (Baldwin's 1938 Supplement), to invalidate certain tax sales of real estate made on assessments of July 1st, for each of the years 1934, 1935, 1936 and 1937, which sales were made pursuant to Section 4036, Kentucky Statutes (Baldwin's 1936 Ed.), and to have liens adjudged them for such taxes, which liens they seek to have enforced. Involved in the action are eight pieces of real estate in which Mrs. Annie G. Mann owned a life estate with remainder in her seven children. The petition covers some 70 pages and sets up in separate paragraphs the tax assessments against each piece of property for the various years involved; that the sheriff acting for the State and County became the purchaser at the tax sales; that each sale was void because not advertised and not conducted as provided by statute and because the taxpayer had sufficient personal property out of which the taxes could have been made. The prayer of the petition was that the various tax sales be set aside and the taxing authorities adjudged a lien on each particular described piece of real estate and that the liens be enforced by a sale of the property.
Defendants' special demurrer on account of defect of parties was overruled and answer was filed. The first paragraph of the answer attempted to traverse the petition thus: *393
"Defendants for answer to the petition herein deny each and every allegation in paragraphs 1 to 244 (setting them out numerically) of the petition herein as fully and to the same extent as if copied herein."
By a second paragraph, defendants describe the seventh and eighth pieces of real estate and aver these two pieces of property were wrongfully assessed in the name of Clementine Lammers on July 1st, of each of the years involved, and were sold as her property and the true owner had no opportunity to pay the taxes thereon.
Section 126, Civil Code of Practice, provides:
"Every material allegation of a pleading must, for the purposes of the action, be taken as true, unless specifically traversed, excepting these, which must be proved, though not traversed."
Section 127 defines a material allegation as "One which is necessary for the statement or support of a cause of action or defense." In this jurisdiction a denial of "each averment of the petition" constitutes no answer whatever. Evans v. Evans,
Defendants complain that the cause was submitted for judgment before it stood for trial, and that to take default judgment ordering a sale of the six pieces of real estate before the issues were disposed of concerning the two remaining parcels, was a trial by piecemeal as criticized in Smith v. Smith,
The fact that the wife of one of the remaindermen was not made a party to the action is immaterial because a tax lien takes precedence over an inchoate right of dower. Mulligan v. Mulligan,
This appeal is not prosecuted from the judgment ordering the sale of the property, but from the order confirming the report of the sale, which is a final order. First State Bank v. Thacker's Adm'x,
The judgment is affirmed.