Court Opinion

ID: 7135738
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:23:41.744974+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:37.272129
License: Public Domain

Opinion of the court by
CHIEF JUSTICE BURNAM
Reveesing.
On the 21st day of September, 1895, Eliza Miller and her husband, Chess Miller, executed a mortgage to Helen Schwabacher upon a small house and lot belonging to Eliza, to secure the payment of a note for $250, which was executed for loaned money. On the 25th of February, 1897, Eliza Miller died intestate. Shortly after the death of Eliza, Chess Miller married again, and occupied the property with his third wife until his death, on the 19th of December, 1902. He was survived by his third wife and a daughter, Sallie Bethel, a daughter of his first wife, who was in no wise related to his second wife, Eliza Miller. After the death of Chess Miller, Helen Schwabadier brought this action against the surviving widow, Mary Miller, and the daughter, Sallie Bethel, and her husband, to collect her debt, and asked an enforcement of the mortgage lien which had been executed to her to secure its payment. In addition to the usual allegations! of such petition, ihe plaintiff further alleged “that Eliza Miller left no heirs or kindred of any kind or degree surviving her, and that the property descended under the statute to her husband, Chess Miller.” The defendants filed; no answer, and in July, 1903, a judgment was rendered directing the sale of the property to secure the plaintiff’s debt, and also several tax liens due the city of Louisville. At the sale which was made pursuant to this judgment, the appellant, W. S. Montz, bought the property at the price of $775. After the sale, hut before the confirmation thereof, Sallie Bethel died, leaving surviving her four children. Her death was suggested, and motion made to revive the ac*259tion against her infant children. Shortly thereafter, Isham Miller qualified as guardian of the infants, and entered1 their appearance to the motion, and consented to a revivor. To all of which the purchaser, Montz, objected. The purchaser*, Montz, thereupon filed in writing exceptions, based upon a number of grounds, to the confirmation of the sale, which were overruled, and the sale confirmed; and he has, appealed, and asks a reversal, first, on the ground that the judgment was not properly revived against the infant heirs of Sallie Bethel; second, because the averments of the petition were not sufficiently full and definite to authorize the conclusion that the property owned by Eliza passed to her husband at her death, under the statute, and also for lack of xu’oof to rebut the legal presumption of heirs.
In support of the first exception, our attention is called to the fact ihat the order was to revive the action against the real representative of the defendant, under section 507' of the Civil Code of Practice, whilst the contention is made that it should have been to revive the judgment under subsection 3, section 407, of the Civil Code of Practice. We can not agree with this contention. The judgment had been executed-by a sale of the property, and the report of the master commissioner to’the court, and no further step was to be taken under it. The question was as to the revivor of the action, and we think the order to revive the action was properly had, as directed by section 507 of the Civil Code of Practice.
The second exception raises a more serious question. The only claim of the defendants to the real estate left by Eliza Miller is as heirs at law of the husband, Chess Miller; and he did not inherit the property under the statute, except under the rare contingency that his deceased wife did not leave surviving her kindred in either paternal or maternal *260line, however remote in degree such relationship may have been. The legal presumption is that every decedent has heirs, but this presumption may be rebutted either by a lapse of time accompanied by the nonappearance of heirs, or by proof of the fact. 22 A. & E. Ency. of Law, 1211. In the case at bar there is neither proof of the fact alleged, nor such lapse of time as -would rebut this presumption. It rests alone upon the allegation of the petition that Eliza Miller left no heirs or kindred of any kind or 'degree surviving her. Whilst we can not agree with the contention of appellant that the form of the averment on this point as made in the petition is a mere legal conclusion, and that it is necessary to state specifically that Eliza Miller left neither paternal nor maternal kindred, this unsupported allegation is not sufficient to divest the heirs at law of Eliza Miller of title in the real estate left by her, in the event such person should hereafter assert title thereto. Neither of the defendants answered the petition, and the judgment of the sale went by default because it was plainly their interest that the averment of the petition should be taken as true. The only way in which a pur chaser of property situated as this is can be protected in his purchase is that the unknown heirs of the deceased wife should be proceeded against under the provision of the Civil Code. If these steps are properly taken, and a sale had, the purchaser would be protected, even in the event it should subsequently develop that the decedent was actually survived by kindred. And upon proper showing made by the defendant claimants that the deceased actually left neither paternal nor maternal' kindred, the chancetllor would be authorized to permit a withdrawal of any surplus funds which might be realized from the sale of the property to satisfy the mortgage of appellee.
*261For reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed and canse remanded, with instruction to sustain the exceptions of appellant to the confirmation of the sale, and for such additional proceedings as may be deemed necessary to conform to the suggestions made in this opinion.