Reversing.
The defendant below, B.C. McEuen, and his mother, Mrs. J.V. McEuen, owned jointly a house and lot in Madisonville which cost them some $5,000 or $5,500. McEuen was a director in the appellant bank when the directors on December 9, 1930, discussed the advisability *Page 115 of merging it with another bank on account of its financial troubles, and on this date McEuen owed it $1,305. On December 20, 1930, McEuen conveyed to his mother his half interest in the property he and his mother owned jointly, and on April 21, 1931, the bank instituted this action against McEuen and his mother wherein it sought to recover from him $1,305 with interest, and to have the deed he made to his mother set aside as a fraudulent conveyance. It appears the suit dragged along and that Mrs. McEuen died January 17, 1937, and the day before her death McEuen filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy.
Section 965-4, Kentucky Statutes, provides the three terms of the Hopkins Circuit Court shall convene on the first Mondays in February and May and on the fourth Monday in September, each term having twenty-four juridical days. On June 26, 1937, the bank, acting under Title 11 of the Civil Code of Practice, filed its petition for reviver against the heirs of Mrs. McEuen, all of whom were brought before the court by summons or warning order, and the bank was prepared to take an order during the February 1938 term reviving the action. McEuen's trustee in bankruptcy filed an intervening petition on February 25, 1938, asking that he be made a party plaintiff to the action. There is some controversy as to whether the trustee filed the petition for revivor against the heirs of Mrs. McEuen on February 25, or March 7, 1938, but we do not think it was necessary for the trustee to file a petition to revive, as will hereinafter be shown, hence the date it was actually filed may be ignored.
The heirs of Mrs. McEuen at the February 1938 term filed a special demurrer to the bank's petition for revivor, questioning the legal capacity of the bank to maintain this action after McEuen became a bankrupt; they next moved the court to strike from the record the petition for revivor filed by the trustee, contending it was not filed within one year after the time when an order of revivor could have been first made as provided by Section 508 of the Civil Code of Practice; also, they filed a motion to dismiss the action. The court being of the opinion that the bank could not maintain this action after McEuen had been adjudged a bankrupt, and being of the further opinion that his trustee in bankruptcy did not file a petition for revivor within one year from the time the order might have been first made, sustained the *Page 116 special demurrer to the bank's petition for revivor and sustained the motion to strike the trustee's petition for revivor, and dismissed the action. The bank and the trustee in bankruptcy prosecute this appeal.
Counsel for appellees admit in their brief that if this action be one to enforce a lien, the bank had authority to maintain it after McEuen had been adjudged a bankrupt. Section 1907a, Kentucky Statutes, under which this action was brought, provides that when the petition describes the property and alleges facts constituting the fraud, "a lis pendens shall be created upon the property so described." The petition avers the facts which the bank contends amount to a fraud upon it; describes the property conveyed; asserts a lien thereon; asks that the conveyance be set aside and that its lien be enforced. Therefore, a lien was created upon this property when plaintiff filed its petition. Motch's Adm'r v. Glenn,
The bank had authority to maintain this action in the state court and to prosecute it to a final conclusion, and the trustee in bankruptcy had the right to intervene in the action. Ray's Trustee v. Ray's Assignee,
Therefore, the court erred in sustaining a special demurrer to the bank's petition for revivor and in dismissing the action. On the bank's petition for revivor an order should have been entered reviving the action in the name of the bank against the heirs of Mrs. McEuen, and then the court should have allowed the trustee in bankruptcy to have intervened in the action and be substituted as plaintiff for the bank as that was agreeable with both the bank and the trustee. On a return of the case to the circuit court an order will be entered reviving the action in the name of the bank, after which an order will be entered filing the intervening petition of the trustee and substituting the trustee as plaintiff in lieu of the bank.
Appellees raise the question that the bank's action was prematurely brought since the clerk's indorsement on the petition shows it was filed April 21, 1930, to set aside a fraudulent conveyance made eight months later, on December 20, 1930. They argue parol evidence is not admissible under Simpson v. Antrobus,
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.