Commonwealth for Use Benefit of Bates v. Hall

64 S.W.2d 585, 251 Ky. 280, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 842
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 585 (Commonwealth for Use Benefit of Bates v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth for Use Benefit of Bates v. Hall, 64 S.W.2d 585, 251 Ky. 280, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 842 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

This appeal involves the jurisdiction of the Knott county court of a proceeding to cancel and set aside an entry of satisfaction of judgment entered upon the record margin of the judgment rendered in a bastardy proceeding' in said court.

The facts are that at the September term, 1928, of the Knott county court, Lula Little and her illegitimate child, Walter Douglas Little, suing in the name of the commonwealth of Kentucky, recovered a judgment against Lawrence Hall, defendant therein, in the sum of $2,880, payable in quarterly installments of $45 each until the said infant, Walter Douglas Little, should arrive at the age of 18 years, and which judgment is of record in the Knott County Court Order Book No. 8, p. 186. On September 22, 1928, Lula Little married Fred Bates. Soon after this marriage, Lawrence Hall, it appears acting in concert with others, caused the appellant Lula Little Bates and her husband to go, late- *281 in the night, to the connty clerk’s office in Hindman, the county seat of Knott county, and there in the presence of the clerk to sign a receipt reciting payment to appellant, in full satisfaction of the said bastardy judgment recovered by her, which receipt was spread on the margin of the court’s record of the judgment and attested by the clerk of the court; Flaintiff claims this receipt of satisfaction should be set aside upon the .ground that she was coerced into making such acknowledgment of satisfaction of' the judgment through fraud, duress, threats, and acts of violence towards her and that she had received no consideration whatsoever therefor.

In February, 1929, the appellant Lula Little Bates, complaining of such alleged fraudulent and coercive treatment of her by the appellee Lawrence Hall and .associates, filed her petition, suing in the name of the commonwealth of Kentucky for the benefit of herself ..and Walter Douglas Little, her son, in the Knott county court against appellee Lawrence Hall, therein seeking cancellation of said entry of satisfaction of the judgment recovered against appellee by her. The action was on January 4, 1930, which action was by agreement of parties transferred to the Knott circuit court. In said petition, it is alleged that said receipt of satisfaction of said judgment was procured by fraud and duress as therein set out, and that although the receipt recited that she then received payment of the amount ■of said judgment, not one cent was paid her, but that the receipt was procured without consideration and is for such reason null and void. Wherefore, she prayed that the said receipt of satisfaction of the judgment so •entered upon the record, be set aside and declared void, and that an order then be entered directing an execution to be issued upon said judgment for all past-due installments and to issue hereafter on default of the payments of said installments as they should become ■due.

Said receipt of satisfaction of judgment spread upon the margin of same, where it appears of record in the said county court order book, and duly attested by the clerk of said court, is as follows:

“Received of Lawrence Hall $2880.00, for benefit of Walter Douglas Little, in full of judgment rendered in the case of Commonwealth of Kentucky *282 against Lawrence Hall, pending in the Knott County Court, on a charge of bastardy and in which judgment was rendered at the August term of the Knott County Court. This 9-28-28.
“Lula Little Bates.
‘Witness:
“Earl Martin
“Troy Mullins”

The cause being submitted to the court for judgment upon the pleadings, proof, and exhibits filed, and the defendant Lawrence Hall having filed special demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court of the subject-matter of the action, the court adjudged as follows:

“This cause having been transferred to this Court by agreement of the parties from the Knott County Court, and the defendant having filed his Special Demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition because the County Court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter, and the court, having considered the same and being advised, is of the opinion that the County Court did not have original jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action, and the transfer of the said action by agreement of the parties from the county court to this court did not confer upon this Court jurisdiction and therefore the demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court is sustained.
“The plaintiff declining to plead further, it is ordered by the court that the plaintiff’s petition be and the same is now and hereby dismissed * *

Prom this judgment of the circuit court, holding that the county court did not have jurisdiction of the subject-matter and that the transfer of the cause by agreement to the circuit court was not effectual to give it jurisdiction and dismissing appellant’s petition, this appeal is prosecuted and presents for our review the question of whether or not the Knott county court did have original jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the suit seeking to set aside and purge its records of the receipt of satisfaction of the judgment entered thereon by the siad court.

By section 388a-l it is provided that:

“The county judges * * * shall keep a record called judgment book, in which shall be entered all judgments, civil and criminal, and same shall be alphabetically cross-indexed. * * * The record so re *283 quired to be kept in such judgment book shall show the date of the judgment, the name of the plaintiff and defendant, the order book and page thereof on which entered, and the date of the satisfaction of said judgment when satisfied.”

At common law, the defendant, upon motion in court, could have satisfaction entered of record.

Section 303, p. 831, vol. 15, R. C. L., headed “Grounds for Vacating Satisfaction,” states in part that:

“A court of chancery has jurisdiction to vacate a satisfaction of judgment effected through a void execution sale of lands. * * * Where an attorney exceeds his authority in entering a satisfaction of a judgment without any actual receipt of the money, such an entry of satisfaction may be vacated as far as the rights of the parties are concerned. ’ ’

Also, by section 302 of this same volume, entitled “Setting Satisfaction Aside,” it is said:

“On proper grounds an entry of satisfaction of a judgment may be vacated, either by motion or by an independent proceeding for that purpose. When a motion is the procedure adopted, it is a matter for the court to consider rather than a clerk of the court, for the setting aside of the vacation of a judgment is a judicial act, and involves the exercise of a sound judicial discretion. Whatever mode of procedure is pursued to cancel the record of the satisfaction of a judgment, the remedy sought is governed by equitable rules, the ultimate question being whether it is inequitable, for the person relying thereon to avail himself of the entry of satisfaction.”

Further, in 31 C. J. sec.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 585, 251 Ky. 280, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-for-use-benefit-of-bates-v-hall-kyctapphigh-1933.