Cox v. Perkins

185 S.W.2d 954, 299 Ky. 470, 173 A.L.R. 797, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 449
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 23, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 S.W.2d 954 (Cox v. Perkins) 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
Cox v. Perkins, 185 S.W.2d 954, 299 Ky. 470, 173 A.L.R. 797, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 449 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Latimer

Reversing.

The appellant, Hubert Junior Cox, by bis next friend, J. C. Cox, filed bis petition in tbe Whitley Circuit Court seeking damages for an alleged unlawful, wrongful and malicious imprisonment. He alleged that tbe defendant, Howard H. Perkins, appellee herein, was tbe duly elected, qualified and acting Justice of tbe Peace in and for the Seventh Magisterial District of Wbitley County; that on tbe 27tb day of July, 1943, as such Justice of tbe Peace, tbe defendant issued a warrant of arrest'for appellant, charging him with adultery; that on tbe 3d day of August, 1943, tbe defendant, acting as Justice of tbe Peace of tbe Seventh Magisterial District, proceeded to try tbe appellant in tbe courthouse in tbe City of Williamsburg, Kentucky, which is without tbe territorial limits of the Seventh Magisterial District and within tbe territorial limits of tbe First Magisterial District of Wbitley County; that after impaneling a jury and bearing tbe evidence, .the defendant, acting as Justice of the Peace, rendered a judgment against tbe appellant fixing bis punishment at a fine of $50 and costs in tbe sum of $19.75, and, thereupon, committed tbe appellant to tbe jail of Wbitley County, Kentucky, to satisfy the judgment; that tbe appellant was confined in tbe jail of Wbitley County, upon a commitment issued upon tbe judgment, from tbe 3d day of August, 1943, *472 until the 14th day of August, 1943, or a total of eleven days. Copies of the warrant of arrest and judgment rendered were filed with the pleading. He alleged that, by reason of the fact the trial was held without the territorial limits of the Seventh Magisterial District, the judgment rendered was null and void and that the defendant was without jurisdiction to hear, try or determine the case against the appellant; that without any cause for so doing, and against the will and consent of the appellant, the defendant issued a mittimus on said void judgment, and did unlawfully, wrongfully, wilfully and maliciously cause the appellant to be carried along the public streets of the City of Williamsburg to the county jail of Whitley County, and there confined him in the jail for eleven days.

Defendant filed answer in which he admitted certain allegations and denied others, then pleading affirmatively, he stated that the plaintiff is estopped; that he waived .any right, if he ever had such, to sue and complain of the place such trial Avas had or held, as set out in plaintiff’s petition, because no objection was made at the time of the trial as to the place of holding the trial; that the trial was held in Williamsburg upon the motion and request of the plaintiff and his father, and that by reason of the acts and conduct of the plaintiff and his next friend, J. C. Cox, they are now estopped and barred and have waived any right to complain.

Plaintiff filed general demurrer to the answer Avhich was overruled. The cause came on for trial, and at the close of the testimony for the plaintiff, the court sustained defendant’s motion for peremptory instruction, from which the plaintiff appeals.

There is considerable acrimonious argument by attorneys on each side of this litigation. It 'will be unnecessary to discuss the various points raised by them, some of which have little, if any, bearing upon the issues presented in this action. Consideration of the contention that the court erred in giving a peremptory instruction for the defendant will dispose of the case and leave it unnecessary to discuss the various questions raised by briefs. In deciding that question it becomes necessary to look carefully to the pleadings and the proof.

Two paramount questions are involved in the consideration of this proposition: (1) Is a judgment rendered and entered by a Justice of the Peace while acting *473 without his territorial jurisdiction, void, and does a judgment so rendered create an actionable cause for damages against the Justice of the Peace so acting? (2) Was the proof introduced by the plaintiff below of sufficient character and quality to support the allegations of the petition? Section 25.630, KRS, provides the manner and authority of a justice of the peace for conducting trials wthout the territorial limits of his district. This statute by no means generalizes judicial power. In fact, it recognizes the necessarily local nature and authority within the territorial limits of the magisterial district. In the case of Wheeler v. Schulman, 165 Ky. 185, 176 S. W. 1017, 1019, Judge Hurt wrote an extended and exhaustive opinion dealing with the jurisdictional rights of Justices of the peace, in which he said:

“The purpose of the Constitution to create and establish one justice’s court in each magisterial district, is as evident as its purpose to permit of the election of only one justice t>f the peace in each of such districts. The court of the justice of the peace for a magisterial district could no more be lawfully held without the territorial limits of such district, than the county, ox quarterly, or circuit.courts, for one county could be lawfully held in another county. The only court of which a justice of the peace is judge, is the one established in the district for which he was elected and serves. The justice’s court for a magisterial district is an institution established for that district, just as the county and circuit court of a county is an institution established for that particular county. The conclusion then necessarily follows, that the justice’s court for a magisterial district must be held within the limits of the district, and if the justice of the peace for that district would hold his court, he must do so within the district, because he is not the judge of any other court. He cannot carry the justice’s court of his district around with him, like something portable as it is not an attachment of his person, but he is an adjunct of it. * * *
“The superior court, in the case of Venoff & Co. v. Morgan, 11 Ky. Law Rep. 276, expressly held that when a justice rendered a judgment outside of his district, where he assumed to hold his court regularly, it was void. In that case, it was also held that the Legislature had the undoubted power to fix the time and place for the holding of a justice’s court.”

*474 In 31 Am. Jnr. 749, sec. 76, it is said: “When the place for holding a justice’s court is definitely fixed pursuant to law, such court cannot be held at any other place; and a judgment of a justice of the peace is void when it affirmatively appears that the court was held at a place where he could not lawfully sit. ’ ’

In Fort v. Kremer et al., 177 Ky. 120, 197 S. W. 538, the court said:

“It may be conceded that Justice Mueninghoffi had no authority to act outside his distinct, and that the judgment and execution issued thereon were invalid. * *
“Had he rendered the judgment and issued the execution in his own district, his acts would have been valid. They are invalid for the sole reason that he for purposes of convenience and in accordance with the custom then prevailing held his court at a point in the city of Louisville outside his district.”

In Blincoe v. Head et al., 103 Ky. 106, 44 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W.2d 954, 299 Ky. 470, 173 A.L.R. 797, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-perkins-kyctapphigh-1945.