OpihioN op the Court by
John D. Carroll, Commissioner— Affirming.
In 1874 one Shultz sold to R. H. Simmons a tract of land in Ohio county and gave bond for title. Failing to pay the purchase money, suit was instituted against him, and in 1875 judgment rendered, ordering a sale of a sufficient quantity of the land to pay the purchase money. This judgment was not executed or satisfied when the owner, Simmons,' died in October, 1877, a'resident of Butler county, Ky., leaving surviving him his widow and four children, aged 12, 10, 5, and 1 years. A few months after his death, a child afterwards named R. L. Simmons was born. In December, 1877, administration ón his estate was *450granted' in the Bntler county court. In November, 1877, the death of Simmons was suggested in the Shultz case, and it was continued for revivor. In April, 1877, a notice that Shultz w'ould move to- have the action revived on a day named in the May term was prepared by the attorney for Shultz. This notice did not mention the administrator or the posthumous child, nor was it executed on either of them; but on Mhy 2, 1878, was executed on the1 widow and four children “by delivering to each of them al copy of this notice, and an extra copy to the mother with whom they resided. ’ ’ On May 17th, A. L. Morton, who was then circuit clerk, Was appointed guardian ad litem for the four children and filed his answer. Afterwards 10 acres of land was sold to pay the debt, and in 1878 an order was made confirming the report of the sale. In March, 1878, Mrs. Hill, who-had a mortgage in this land, filed her action in the Ohio circuit court to have her lien enforced. Process appears to have been executed in this action on the widow and four older children, a guardian ad litem was appointed for the children and answered, and the Butler county administrator appeared in the ease and filed a special demurrer, which was overruled. In November, 1880, a judgment ordering a sale of the remainder of the land was entered, and under this judgment the remainder of the land was sold; and in' 1881 the report of the sale was confirmed. The record in these two_ actions has been lost, and the above somewhat imperfect data were obtained from order books and by a special commissioner appointed to supply as much as possible the lost record. Appellee, Wallace M„ Brown, by a series of conveyances, became the owner of! the 150 acres of land sold under these *451decrees, and the appellants, wlio are children of R. H. Simmons, instituted this action in 1901 to recover from him this land. The chancellor dismissed the petition as to all except the posthumous child, R, L. Simmons, adjudging that he was entitled to one-fifth of the land as he was not a party to any proceedings under which it was sold.
Appellants contend that the sale under the Shultz judgment was void because the judgment was not revived against the administrator, wlm was not at any time a party to this action, because the revivor was made too soon and proper notice of it was not given to the infants, and because an attempt was made to revive the action, and not the judgment, and no guardian ad litem was regularly appointed for the infants. They contend that the judgment in the Hill case was void because the Ohio Circuit Court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action, and no guardian ad litem was appointed to represent the infants, and therefore they were not before the court when judgment was rendered. Counsel for the appellees concede that the proceedings in these cases were not entirely regular, but insist that they are not void, however erroneous, and cannot be attacked in this collateral proceeding.
We will first take up the objections urged against the validity of the judgment in the Shultz case. It is true that the judgment, and not the action, should have been revived; but the presumption must be indulged in, after the great length of time, that it was in fact the judgment, and not the action, that, was revived. Indeed, it does not seem material whether the notice of revivor or the order are designated as an attempt to revive the action, or the judgment, because a judgment in the action had been *452rendered during the life of Simmons, and it was necessarily the judgment that was sought to be revived. No attempt whatever of any kind was made to revive the action. It would be extremely technical to -hold that merely because the notice and order show that it was the action and not the judgment that was sought to be, and Was, revived, that therefore all proceedings after the revivor were void. The administrator was not a necessary party to.the proceeding to revive this judgment. N> personal relief was sought, and upon the death of Simmnos the title to this land descended to his heirs. Burge’s Adm’r v. Brown, 5 Bush, 535, 96 Am. Dec. 369. The land alone was sought to be subjected and the heirs were the only necessary parties to this proceeding, although an action or judgment may be revived against both the personal "representatives and the heirs, and in some cases it may be necessary that the personal representative should, be made a party. The Code of 1854, controls the proceeding in the Shultz case, and that Code provides in section'437 that a judgment may be revived against the personal representative and heirs, either or both, by delivering a copy of the notice to the persons against whom the judgment is sought to be revived; and section 81 ■provides that where the defendant is an infant “under.the age of fourteen years, the service must be upon him and his father or guardian, or if neither of these can be found, then upon his mother, or any other white person having the care or control of the infant, or with whom he lives.” These infants were under the age of fourteen years, their father was dead, and it does not appear that they had a* guardian. Therefore it was proper to execute the notice of revivor upon the infants and their mother' *453in the manner in which it was done in this ease. Rodgers v. Rodgers’ Adm’r, 31 S. W. 139, 17 Ky., Law Rep. 358; Cheatham v. Whitman, 86 Ky. 614 9 Ky. Law Rep., 761; 6 S. W., 595. That Code also provided that a judgment should not he revived against the heirs until twelve months after the death of the defendant. The judgment in this case was revived against the heirs before the expiration of twelve months after the death of Simmons, and in this respect the proceeding was irregular and premature; but this premature proceeding did not render the sale under the judgment void, hut only erroneous. It was merely a clerical misprision (Webber v. Webber, 1 Metc. 18; Morrison v. Beckham, 96 Ky. 72, 16 Ky. Law Rep. 294; 27 S. W. 868), as was the failure of the guardian ad litem to file an answer if there was such failure (Keller v. Wilson, 90 Ky. 350, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 471; 14 S. W. 332; Oliver v. Park, 101 Ky. 1, 19 Ky. Law Rep. 179; 39 S. W. 423). The sale •under the judgment not being void, the remedy of these appellants was by appeal, and they cannot successfully attack it in this collateral proceeding.
The judgment in the Hill case is. assailed chiefly on the ground that the Ohio Circuit Court had no jurisdiction of the action, because Simmons died in Butler county, Ky., and administration on his estate was granted in that county before the Hill action was instituted, and therefore it is insisted that the Butler Circuit Court alone had jurisdiction of the action, and that all the proceedings in the Ohio. Circuit Court were void. This action was instituted in 1878, and hence the present Code of P’raotice controls it. Section 62 of the Civil Code of Practice provides that “actions must be brought in the county in which the subject of the action or some part thereof is *454situated * * * for the sale of real property * * * under a mortgage lien or other encumbrance or charge, except for debts of a decedent.'” Section 65, a.s it read pending this action provided that “an action to settle the estate of a deceased person must be brought in the county in which his personal representative was qualified;” and section 66 provided that “ an action for the distribution of the estate of a deceased person, or for its partition among his heirs, or for the sale and payment of his debts, or property descended from or devised by him must be brought in the county in which his personal representative was qualified.” These sections of the Code must be construed together, and when so construed there is no conflict between them.
Under section 62 an action for the enforcement of a mortgage lien or other eneumbranee on land against the estate of a decedent may be brought in the county within which the land sought to be- subjected is situated, or, if there be an action pending to settle the estate of a deceased person, in the county in which his personal representative was qualified, or, an action pending in such county for the distribution of the estate of a decedent, or its partition among his heirs, or for the sale and payment of his debts, the mortgagee or person holding the lien may assert his claim in the action pending in the county in which the personal representative was qualified, and in such action may have the land upon which he has a lien subjected to the payment of his debt, although it may be situated in another. In other words, there are two jurisdictions in which a person having a lien on real estate owned by a deceased person may seek its enforcement; that is, *455in the county where the land is situated, or in the county in which the personal representative qualified and where there is an action pending to settle his estate or for its distribution or sale for the payment of his debts. Under- these provisions, if an action should be brought to settle the estate of a deceased person, or for its distribution or partition or sale for the payment of his debts, in the county where the personal representative qualified, before an action was instituted by the mortgagee in the county where the land was located, the court might enjoin any creditor of the decedent from instituting an action in any other county and require him to assert his claim in the action pending in the county where the personal representative qualified. This construction is sustained by sections 428-436, Civil Code Practice, relating to the settlement of the estates of deceased persons, where it is provided in substance that in an action to settle the estate of deceased persons the representatives of the deceased and all persons having a lien upon or interest in the property left by the1 decedent, and the creditors of the decedent so far as known, must be parties to the action as plaintiffs or defendants and upon the institution of such an action, an order may be made enjoining the prosecution of actions against the representatives of decedent by creditors for their demands. It is also supported by the decisions of this court in Shields v. Yellman, 100 Ky. 655, 18 Ky. Law Rep. 1092; 39 S. W. 30; Willis’ Adm’r v. Roberts’ Adm’r, 90 Ky. 122, 11 Ky. Law Rep. 929; 13 S. W. 358; Citizens’ National Bank v. Boswell’s Admr’s, 93 Ky. 92, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 469, 19 S. W. 174; Dehaven v. Dehaven’s Adm’r, 46 S. W. 215, 47 S. W. 597, 20 Ky. Law Rep. 663; 104 Ky. 41.
*456If, however, the action is brought for the distribution of the estate of a deceased person, or for its partition among the heirs or for a sale for the payment of his debts generally, it must be instituted in the county in which his personal representative was qualified, as provided in section 66. This section evidently contemplates an action instituted .for the purpose of settling the estate of a deceased person and not the subjection of his real estate to the payment of a single debt such as is provided for in section 62. It therefore follows that-the Ohio Circuit Court had jurisdiction of the action to subject the land situated in Ohio county to the payment of the'Hill mortgage.
It seems entirely proper to add in this connection that courts of equity do not look with much favor upon actions commenced so long a time after the cause of action originally accrued, and when it is sought in an action like this to recover land that has been in the adverse and peaceful possession of bona fide owners for more than 20 years, every presumption will be indulged in favor of the validity of the judgment under which the owners claim title Oliver v. Park, 101 Ky. 1, 19 Ky. Law Rep. 179, 39 S. W. 423; Northington v. Reed, 75 S. W. 206, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 354; Jones v. Edwards, 78 Ky. 6.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Petition by appellant for rehearing overruled.