207 Ky. 535 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
Opinion of the Court by
■ Reversing.
Appellees, Wilson and Meeee, brought this equitable action against Tarter and wife, seeking to enjoin them from obstructing a roadway or public passway through the lands of defendants to which plaintiffs claimed a prescriptive right to the use.
The answer was a traverse in the first paragraph, and in the second relied upon a judgment of the county court of Russell county authorizing an alteration or change of the road, insofar as it went through defendant’s property, and alleged that as thus altered and changed by the judgment of the county court had been opened up and was being maintained for the public use. There was filed with the answer copies of certain orders and proceedings in the county court in the alteration of the road, but none of them disclosed whether proper notice had been given of the county court proceeding for alteration.
To this second paragraph the trial court sustained a demurrer because “the exhibits filed with said answer failing to show that proper and legal notices had been given of the application to the county court by defendants before the change in said passway was authorized, ’ ’ the county court was without jurisdiction to order the change, and its judgment was therefore void.
The court on final submission granted the injunctive relief sought by the plaintiffs, and the defendants prosecute this appeal.
Clearly the attack upon the validity of the county court judgment is a collateral attack, for when a judgment is relied upon as evidence of a right, and its insufficiency as such evidence is denied because of its alleged invalidity, the attack upon it is a collateral attack. Decker v. Tyree, 204 Ky. 302.
“The county court is a court of record, and when it is given exclusive jurisdiction of a subject matter, its judgments, as entered on its record, are entitled to the same immunity from collateral attack as are judgments of courts of superior and general jurisdiction. ’ ’
It follows that as the records of the county court did not affirmatively show the want of jurisdiction, the jurisdictional facts will be presumed to have existed on the collateral attack raised by the demurrer.
'No other question is decided, but because of the error in sustaining the demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer, the judgment is reversed with directions to overrule same, and for further proceedings.