Durham v. Farmers' Bank & Trust Co.

280 S.W. 962, 213 Ky. 208, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 481
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 23, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 962 (Durham v. Farmers' Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Durham v. Farmers' Bank & Trust Co., 280 S.W. 962, 213 Ky. 208, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 481 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming

Appellees, Farmers’ Bank & Trust Company,’et ah, obtained a judgment in the Nelson circuit court against appellant, George W. Durham, and Thomas J. Smith, for the sum of $5,333.04, in March, 1922. Smith satisfied the bank, and execution was issued in the name of the bank for his use and benefit, directed to the sheriff of Lincoln county, commanding him that of the estate of George W. Durham he cause to be made the sum of $5,333.34, with interest and certain named costs, which execution was *209 hy the sheriff of Lincoln county levied upon the interest of appellant, Durham, in a certain tract of land on Dix river in Lincoln county. The lien thus created was duly noted and recorded in the office of the clerk of the Lincoln county court so as to constitute constructive notice to purchasers. Thereafter the land was sold by Durham at public auction, a public announcement being made before the sale and in the hearing of Smith, the beneficiary in the execution, to the effect that there were no liens or other claims against the land save one to an insurance company. The execution bearing the return of the officer, levied upon the Lincoln county land, was duly returned to the office off the clerk of the Nelson circuit court and there entered of record. After this was done appellant, Durham, entered motion in the Nelson circuit court to quash the execution and the return thereon, and as ground for his motion stated that “prior to the issual of the execution of fieri facias and the delivery of same to the sheriff of Lincoln county for execution by levying same on said land, no such execution had been previously issued on said judgment by the clerk of the Nelson circuit court, in which county said judgment was rendered, directed to the sheriff of Nelson county for execution, and neither the plaintiff in said execution nor its agent or attorney, prior to the issual of the aforesaid execution, had made an affidavit and filed same with the Clerk of the Nelson circuit court stating that the defendant in the judgment upon which said execution was issued had not sufficient property in Nelson county, the county in which said judgment was rendered, nor in the county in which he resided to satisfy the same, subject to execution. The said George W. Durham, the defendant in the judgment on which said execution was issued, did not reside in Lincoln county, Ky., at the time said judgment was rendered nor did he reside in that county at the time ;said execution was issued, nor did he reside in that •county at the time said execution was levied by the sheriff •of Lincoln county.”

By section 1656, Kentucky Statutes, it is provided:

“No execution shall issue to any other county than that in which.the judgment was rendered, or that in which the defendant resides, until execution has issued to one of. the counties named, and has been returned by the proper officer no property found, as to all or part thereof.”

*210 Tlie foregoing section is modified by section 1656-1, which reads:

“This section is not to apply when the plaintiff, his agent or attorney, shall make affidavit and file the same with the clerk of the court in which the judgment was rendered, stating that the defendant in the judgment has not sufficient property in the county in which the judgment was rendered, nor in the county in which he resides, to satisfy the same, subject to execution. Upon filing such affidavit, execution shall issue to any or as many counties as the plaintiff may direct.”

In response to the motion of appellant, Durham, to quash the execution and return thereon, the bank filed its verified answer by which it denied that it had failed to make and file the affidavit required in section 1656-1, above popied; and further denied that it had failed to cause an execution to issue against the appellant Durham in Nelson county and to have said execution returned by the proper officer, in effect no property found as to all or part of the debt, as provided in section 1656; further pleading the bank affirmatively averred that its attorney, C. T. Atkinson, of the Nelson county bar, was the attorney of the plaintiff in that action, and ‘ ‘ that it said attorney, C. T. Atkinson, before the issual of said execution, prepared, signed and swore to an affidavit, wherein he stated in substance that the G-. W. Durham, the defendant in the judgment upon which said execution was issued had not sufficient property in Nelson county, the county in which the judgment was rendered, nor in the county in which he resided, to sátisfy the judgment in said-action, and that he filed same with the clerk of the Nelson circuit court by delivering same to W. J. Dalmazzo, who was at said time the regularly appointed, duly qualified and acting deputy clerk of the Nelson circuit court, and requested the said W. J. Dalmazzo as deputy clerk to file said affidavit, which was done and to issue said execution and same was issued by him and delivered to said C. T. Atkinson, its attorney, and by him forwarded to the sheriff of Lincoln county with directions to levy same upon the land in said county belonging to G-. W. Durham, the defendant in said execution, and while said execution was in full force, same was levied on March 27th, 1922, by the sheriff of Lincoln county on the lands of the execution defendant described in said *211 motion, and. said execution was duly returned by said sheriff to the clerk of the Nelson circuit court.”

The averments of the response were supported by the affidavit of J. Smith Barlow, attorney, of Bardstown, who stated he was in the office of Atkinson and saw and read the affidavit prepared by Atkinson and that Atkinson took the affidavit and went in the direction of the office of the clerk of the Nelson circuit court and after a short time returned to his own office with the execution mentioned in the motion and the said execution was in the handwriting of the deputy clerk, Dalmazzo.

In support of his motion to quash the execution and the return thereon appellant, Durham, filed his own affidavit and that of the clerk of the Nelson circuit court and several others to prove that the record of the office of the clerk of the Nelson circuit court did not show that an affidavit had been filed in pursuance to section 1656-1, and it is admitted that a search of the office of the clerk of the Nelson circuit court does not disclose such an affidavit. It is, however, shown that the deputy clerk, Dalmazzo, is now dead, and by stipulation it is shown that the execution mentioned in the motion was in the handwriting of that deputy clerk. It is, therefore, the contention of appellee that the affidavit required by section 1656-1 was duly prepared and filed by Atkinson as attorney for the bank, but that it has since been lost or mislaid; that notwithstanding this appellee insists that it fully complied with the requirements of the statute, and that the execution should not be quashed even though the affidavit cannot be found in the office of the clerk since it has been shown that it was actually filed as required by the statutes. It is further contended that as the response of appellee bank and Smith to the motion to quash was not traversed either by pleading, affidavit' or by orders of court, it must be accepted as true.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 962, 213 Ky. 208, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durham-v-farmers-bank-trust-co-kyctapphigh-1926.