Brown v. Vancleave

6 S.W. 25, 86 Ky. 381, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 147
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 6, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 6 S.W. 25 (Brown v. Vancleave) 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
Brown v. Vancleave, 6 S.W. 25, 86 Ky. 381, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 147 (Ky. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

JUDGE BENNETT

delivered the opinion op the court.

Tlie appellee brought suit in the Louisville Chancery Court against the firm of Noland, Price & Co., the appellant, Brown, being a member of the firm, on two promissory notes for two thousand dollars each, to each of which the name of said firm was signed.

The defendants were proceeded against as non-residents, and an attachment was obtained against them, which was levied upon thirty shares of stock as the property of the- appellant, Brown. Afterwards, appellant, Brown, appeared and filed his answer, in which he pleaded that the notes were given without any consideration ; for the liabilities for which they were given were liabilities of the .firm of Noland, Price, Joiner & Co., of which firm he, Brown, was not a member; and [383]*383that the firm name of Noland, Price & Co.; of which firm he, Brown, was a member, was signed to said notes by Noland, without the authority of said firm or of him, Brown.

On the trial of the issue thus presented the chancellor found the facts alleged by Brown to be true, except that five hundred and ten dollars and ninety-nine cents of the notes consisted of indebtedness due to the appellee by the firm of Noland, Price & Co., for which sum, together with interest thereon, the court gave judgment against the appellant, Brown. This judgment was rendered on the twenty-ninth day of ‘April, 1884.

Besides the formal adjudication of the amount of recovery, the judgment contains this provision :

“Unless the defendant, Brown, shall within ten days tender the plaintiff or pay into court the amount of this judgment and interest and the cost, to be ascertained by taxation of the clerk, the court will proceed to render judgment for the sale of the attached property, or otherwise dispose of the same, for which purpose the action is retained.”

The appellant, Brown, made a motion for a new trial, which motion was overruled on the thirteenth of May, 1884. On that day he paid into court five hundred and ninety-five dollars and ten cents, the full amount of the judgment, interest and cost. This sum he had previously tendered within the ten days allowed to the appellant. On the same day that the appellant paid this sum into court in the discharge of the judgment, and after the sum was so paid into court, the appellee filed an amended petition, in which he sought to subr [384]*384ject appellant’s thirty shares of stock attached to the payment of the two notes, upon the ground that Noland had appellant’s authority to pledge this stock for the payment of said notes, and that Noland did pledge the stock for the payment of the notes. The appellant objected to the filing of the amended petition, but his objection was overruled. He thereupon filed an answer controverting the allegations of the amended petition. On the thirteenth of February, 1885, judgment was rendered on the amended petition in favor of the appellee, and subjecting the stock to the payment of said notes. From which judgment- the appellant, Brown, has appealed.

The appellant’s appeal was filed in the Superior Court on June the 11th, 1886. The appellee, on the twenty-third of March, 1887, prayed a cross-appeal from the judgment rendered the twenty-ninth of April, 1884. The Superior Court on May the 4th, 1887, granted the cross-appeal. Thereupon, the appeal and cross-appeal were transferred to this court.

The appellant denies the right of the appellee to a cross-appeal. First. Because the judgment rendered on the twenty-ninth of April, 1884, is a separate and distinct judgment from the judgment rendered on the thirteenth of February, 1885, from which he appealed. Second. Because the judgment rendered on the twenty-ninth of April, 1884, is a final judgment, and more than two years having elapsed from the rendition of that judgment to the filing of the cross-appeal, the appellee’s right to appeal is barred. Third. The appellee having voluntarily withdrawn the money which the appellant deposited in court in discharge of the judg[385]*385ment rendered on the twenty-ninth of April, 1884, he has deprived himself of his right to appeal from that .judgment.

In the case of the appellee against Noland, Price & Co., the issue joined between the appellant and appellee involved not only the question of the appellant’s liability on the two notes, sued on, but the extent of that liability. The chancellor resolved that issue in favor of the appellee, and fixed the liability of the appellant at five hundred and ten dollars and ninety-nine cents, .and interest thereon and costs, for which judgment was rendered against the appellant on the twenty-ninth of April, 1884. This judgment was essentially final, from which either party had the right to appeal.

By the amended petition filed after said judgment was rendered, the appellee sought to subject the thirty shares of stock attached as the property of the appellant to the satisfaction of the two notes, upon the ground that Noland, by the authority of the appellant, had pledged this stock to the appellee as collateral ¡security for the payment of these two notes. The object of the amended petition was not to subject the stock to the payment of the notes, on account of' the appellant’s liability thereon, because his liability thereon had already been determined by the court, and that ■ liability had been discharged by the payment of the money in court, under its order, in satisfaction of the judgment; but the object of the amendment was to subject the stock to the satisfaction of the remaining portion of the notes, for which it. had been adjudged the appellant was not liable. The amendment, therefore, alleged a distinct and new cause of action, which [386]*386was in no manner germane to the issue joined in the-original action between the appellant and appellee. In the original action the judgment against the appellant fixing his liability was complete and final. In the action by the amended proceeding a new, independent- and distinct cause of action was presented, which was-prosecuted to a final judgment, from which the appellant has appealed.

When either party appeals from a final judgment,, his adversary may have a cross-appeal from that judgment, for the purpose of correcting any errors in the-judgment to his prejudice or any interlocutory judgment or order which has influenced or controlled the final judgment to his prejudice. But he certainly can not have a cross-appeal from a judgment, although rendered in an action between him and the appellant, which was rendered in an action wholly distinct from the action in which the judgment was rendered and appealed from by the appellant.

Also, if the cross-appeal might be regarded as an original appeal, which, however, is not conceded, it should be dismissed, because the appeal was not taken within two years from the time of the rendition of the judgment in the lower court.

■ Also, the appellant paid in court, pursuant to the-order of court, the' amount of the debt,- interest and* costs, for which judgment was rendered on the twenty-ninth of April, 1884. This sum was paid in court in discharge of the judgment, and the appellee subsequently withdrew said sum and appropriated it to his-■own use. It must be deemed that the money was paid in court in discharge of the judgment, and that the [387]*387appellee so received it.

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6 S.W. 25, 86 Ky. 381, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-vancleave-kyctapp-1887.