149 Ky. 707 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1912
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
This action was brought by the guardian of B. F. Taylor, Swannie Taylor and Mabel Taylor under section 489 of the Civil Code, to sell their remainder interests in some lands for the purpose of maintaining and educating them. The land was sold by order of court and this appeal is prosecuted by the attorney appointed guardian ad litem for the children. It is claimed that the judgment is erroneous because no summons was served upon. B. F. Taylor and Swannie Taylor, infants over fourteen years of age, and because the evidence did not authorize the court to render the judgment of sale.
Dr. G. W. Taylor and Elizabeth Taylor, the parents of the children, were also made defendants and the sum
“Executed in full by delivering a true copy of the within,notice to Dr. G. W. Taylor; executed on B. F. Taylor, Swannie Taylor, Mable Taylor, Elizabeth Taylor, Dr. G. W. Taylor’s infant heirs, by delivering a true copy of the within notice to Dr. G. W. Taylor for each of those infant heirs.
“This May 15th, 1909.
“J. A. Scott. S. P. C.
“By W. A. May, D. S.”
It was alleged in the petition and proved that at time of the service of the summons, B. F. and*Swannie Taylor were nineteen and seventeen years of age. To authorize a judgment against a defendant it is necessary that a summons he executed on him, except, as provided in section 52 of the Code, when the defendant is under fourteen years of age, and the summons must then be served upon his father, mother, guardian or the person having him in charge, and it was held in Womble v. Trice, 112 Ky., 533, that there was no authority for the clerk to appoint a guardian ad litem for an infant over fourteen years of age until he had been summoned. B. F. and Swannie Taylor, the children over fourteen years of age, had not been summoned as required by the Code and the court did not have authority to order the sale of their property. B. F. Taylor, the oldest child, however, arrived at the age of twenty-one since the sale was made and seems to have ratified it in some way and has, as appears in this court, caused the appeal in so far as he was concerned, to be dismissed, hut this does not affect the appeal by the others. ¡
The evidence did not authorize the judgment for the sale of the land. As stated, the sale was sought because of the tender years of the infant defendants for which reason they coiild not he bound out as apprentices and because it was necessary to sell their interests for their maintenance and education. It was not alleged nor proved that the parents of the children were poor and unable to maintain and educate them. ' The only hint that such was the case was that one witness said they lived upon a poor and rocky farm. The father was a physician, and it is possible that he or their mother had other farms and valuable personal property which would
For these reasons, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.