Brashears v. Combs

192 S.W. 482, 174 Ky. 344, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 192
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 27, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 482 (Brashears v. Combs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brashears v. Combs, 192 S.W. 482, 174 Ky. 344, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 192 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clarke

Reversing.

1. The judgment in this ease .will have to- be reversed because the appellant, defendant below, was not tendered a panel of eighteen jurors in accordance with section 2247 of the Kentucky Statutes, there being more than three bystanders in the panel tendered, and defendant having objected and excepted thereto. See L. & N. R. R. Co. v. King, 161 Ky. 324; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Owens, 164 Ky. 557; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Patrick, 167 Ky. 118; Imperial Jellico Coal Co. v. Bryant, 168 Ky. 385; Winchester v. Watson, 169 Ky. 213.

Of the many other questions presented Upon this appeal, in view of the fact that another trial will be necessary, we shall consider the following: first, the defendant’s motion for a change of venue; second, defendant’s demurrer to the amended petition, and his motion to require the plaintiff to elect which cause of action [346]*346therein set ont he would prosecute; third, plaintiff’s demurrer to the tenth and eleventh paragraphs of defendant’s amended answer; fourth, defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction; fifth, defendant’s objection to the instruction given, and to the refusal of the court to give offered instructions.

2. Upon application for a change of venue the defendant introduced sixteen witnesses, all of whom were representative citizens of the county, acquainted with both plaintiff and defendant for many years, and twelve of them testified that they knew of no reason why the defendant could not obtain a fair and impartial jury in Perry county, in the ordinary way, to try his case and to give him a fair trial. Of the other witnesses introduced by defendant, James Pratt, his brother-in-law, John C. Wood and Ben C. Wood testified that by reason of his having been adjudged a bankrupt and discharged from his obligations, he could not get a fair trial, if the jury was selected from that part of the county where defendant lives, but that they did not know of conditions in other parts of the county. The remaining witness, Dr. G-. W. Campbell, testified that, in his judgment, there would be a disposition on the part of jurors selected from that county, to accept the testimony of the plaintiff, that the defendant, since the bankruptcy discharge, had given a new promise to pay his indebtedness, rather than the denial of this promise by the defendant. From the testimony of all these witnesses, it is shown that the plaintiff is a prominent, influential and popular citizen of the county, having been elected sheriff of the county for two terms, about twenty-five years ago, although he was the candidate of the minority party in the county, and that he is a member of one of the largest and most influential families in the county. Upon the other hand, it is shown that the defendant, although also of a large and influential family, is not so widely known, has not so many acquaintances as the plaintiff, and, by the testimony of some of the witnesses, that there has been some feeling engendered against him, among his acquaintances in the part of the county in which he lives, by reason of the fact that he has been, upon two occasions, discharged from his obligations in bankruptcy.

The rule of law applicable upon a motion for a change of venue has been stated many times by this [347]*347court, and is thoroughly established, as stated in the case of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Nethery, 160 Ky. 369:

“The rule is that the question of granting an application for a change of venue is addressed to the sound discretion of the court; and a refusal of an application for a change of venue will not be disturbed on appeal unless it appears that there has been an abuse of discretion. Warden v. Madisonville, H. & E. R. Co., 125 Ky. 644, 101 S. W. 914, 31 R. 234.”

We do not deem it necessary to review the many cases cited by appellant in which the rule, as above. stated, is approved, because we think it is clear that he did not, even by his own evidence, show such a condition of public sentiment as would warrant us in saying that the trial court abused a sound judicial discretion in refusing to grant the application for a change of venue.

3. After defendant had plead his discharge in bankruptcy, in bar of the cause of action set up against him by the plaintiff in the original petition to recover on the implied promise to reimburse plaintiff for the sums he had paid in discharge of several replevin bonds which he had signed for defendant as surety, aggregating $2,157.72, the plaintiff filed an amended petition, alleging a new promise upon the part of the defendant, made after the discharge in bankruptcy, and before the filing of the amended , petition, to pay this indebtedness. There were seven of these replevin bonds paid by plaintiff, and the alleged new promise to pay the amount of each bond is set up in a separate paragraph, but the promise with reference to each is the same; the allegations being, in substance, that, since the 'discharge in bankruptcy, and before the filing of the amended petition, defendant promised and agreed to and with the plaintiff, on divers occasions and on divers days, to pay said debt just as soon as he was able to do so; that the defendant, at the time the amended petition was filed, was, and is, able to pay said debt, being the owner, when the amended petition was filed, and at all times since, of real estate, and other property, of the value of more than $10,000.00 over and above all of his debts.

After the filing of the amended petition, plaintiff, being required to elect whether he would .prosecute the cause of action set up in the original or the amended petition, elected to proceed upon the latter. Counsel for [348]*348the defendant now argues, that, having elected to prosecute the cause of action set up in the amended petition, which does not repeat the allegations' of the original petition, hut states the new promise as to each debt as an amendment to the original petition, plaintiff cannot rely upon the allegations of the original petition, for any purpose.

We cannot concur in this contention, because, although plaintiff elected to prosecute the cause of action set up in the amended petition, the cause of action he elected to prosecute was that set up in the amended petition as an amendment to the original petition, and, in determining the sufficiency of the amended petition, upon the demurrer, it is as an amendment to the original petition that it is considered; in other words, the cause of action which he elected to prosecute, is that set out in the petition as amended. The amended petition does not set up the new promise as a separate, distinct or independent cause of action from that referred to in the original petition, but expressly states that it is amendatory and supplemental to the original petition.

Counsel for defendant also argue that, as the new promise was conditional, to make it. binding, the plaintiff must have accepted the promise upon the conditions made; and, as neither the. petition nor amended petition states that the promise was so accepted by the plaintiff, a cause of action was not stated. It is, of course, true that plaintiff must have accepted the new promise, as made, to make it binding; and plaintiff stated in his amended: petition, that the defendant “promised and agreed, to and with the plaintiff,” to pay the debt as soon as he was able, which statement, it seems to us, sufficiently states that the plaintiff accepted the promise made; otherwise the defendant could not have agreed with the. plaintiff about the promise.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W. 482, 174 Ky. 344, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brashears-v-combs-kyctapp-1917.