Appellants sued to set aside a default and decree, taken against them through their mistake, inadvertence and excusable neglect, quieting title to certain lands in appellee in a suit by appellee against appellants. It is averred in the verified complaint that in 1892, Erederick Wellinger, the father of appellants, was a widower, and owned in fee simple the lands in question, and in that year he and appellee entered into a marriage contract, procured a marriage license from' the county clerk, and had a minister perform the ceremony making appellee, as these appellants and Erederick Wellinger believed, the lawful wife of Erederick; that in July, 1893, Wellinger and appellee conveyed the land to one Mock as trustee, who on the same date reeonveyed the land to Wellinger and appellee as husband and wife, as Wellinger and appellants believed; that in September, 1902, Erederick Wellinger died intestate leaving as his only heirs at law these appellants, his children, and the appellee, as his widow, as appellants then believed; that immediately after the death of Frederick Wellinger, appellee claimed to be the owner of all the lands as surviving widow, and brought a suit against appellants to quiet her title; that as soon as such suit was brought, and summons served upon them, they immediately went to employ counsel to ascertain if they had any interest in the land, and they were infox-med by sxxch counsel that by the deed
The application states that until a short time before this suit was brought appellants had no knowledge that appellee was the undivorced wife of Oottenhrook when she married Wellinger. The evidence does not controvert this, nor does it show that they had knowledge of any facts, which, through reasonable diligence on their part, would have disclosed to them the invalidity of the marriage. They knew appellee and Wellinger were duly married, and that they lived together as husband and wife until his death; and that when they were married appellee claimed to he the widow of Bowman, deceased. A careful reading of all the evidence fails to show that, by the exercise of reasonable diligence on the part of appellants, they could have known at the time the default was taken the true relation of appellee and Wellinger. From the application and the evidence we think the conclusion must necessarily follow that the reason for the appellants’ failure to defend the suit resulted from a mistake concerning the facts, and not from want of information as to their right to plead this defense until after the judgment by default.
Judgment reversed.