Fidelity & Columbia Trust Co. v. Huffman

82 S.W.2d 482, 259 Ky. 477, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 22, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 82 S.W.2d 482 (Fidelity & Columbia Trust Co. v. Huffman) 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
Fidelity & Columbia Trust Co. v. Huffman, 82 S.W.2d 482, 259 Ky. 477, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 329 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The action out of which this litigation sprang was filed in the Boone circuit court on December 18, 1925, by Keith and H. B. Huffman v. Richard P. Martin et ai. to recover the balance lof $4,000 of a once larger note and accumulated interest. It pursued a snaillike course until the rendition of the contested order and judgment against appellant, Fidelity & Columbia Trust Company, made on April 16, 1932. An attachment was gotten out in the original -action and appellant was summoned as a garnishee. It filed its answer or response- in which it stated, in substance, that it did not owe the defendant Martin any amount at that time, but that it was trustee of a fund which it had in its possession of about $5,000, and that the father of Martin had a life interest in it and that at his death there would be due the defendant Martin one-seventh of that fund. No order was taken concerning that response.

One year and seven months from that date and on December 14, 1927, a judgment was rendered in the case dismissing the action of the Huffmans and expressly discharging the attachment. They executed a supersedeas bond with the clerk of the Boone circuit court on that same day, but it nowhere appears that any supersedeas was issued on that bond, or that one did actually lissue, except the presumption that the clerk did his duty and actually issued one. In due time an appeal was prosecuted to this court, and on November 2, 1928, we reversed the judgment in the case of Huffman v. Martin, 226 Ky. 137, 10 S. W. (2d) 636. Five months and six days from the rendition of that opinion and on *479 April 8, 1929, the mandate from this court was filed in the Boone circuit court. In the meantime, appellant had amended its response by stating that since filing its first one the father of the defendant Martin had died and his life interest in the trust fund that it held was terminated and that the defendant was entitled to his aliquot part thereof amounting to $705.18. No order or direction was then taken concerning that response.

On December 18, 1929, four years after .the action was filed and more than one year after our opinion, supra, plaintiff entered motion to require the appellant as garnishee to pay into court or to plaintiff the amount of money disclosed by its response, and that motion was sustained and the court ordered the payment of the amount by the garnishee “or show cause if any it has or can why it should not do so at the next April 1930 term.” Within the time given, and'on April 17, 1930, appellant responded to that order and stated that before the appeal, supra, was prosecuted to this court it (garnishee) was presented a copy of the court’s judgment dismissing the action and discharging the attachment and it paid tx> defendant Martin, or for his. benefit, the sum due him as his portion of the trust funds in its hands which was the amount that it had stated in its response as garnishee; that no supersedeas had ever been served on it; and that at the time of such payment it had no knowledge of the prosecution of the appeal, or the execution of any supersedeas bond, or the issuance of any supersedeas thereon.

No action was taken at that time on that response, but eight months thereafter and on December 17, 1930, the court entered this order: “The response of the defendant, Fidelity and Columbia Trust Company, to a rule ordered herein on the 19th day of December, 1929, requiring it to show cause why it should not pay into Court the money in its possession owing to the defendant, Richard P. Martin, coming on for hearing and being heard by the Court is deemed sufficient and it is ordered that said rule be and the same is now discharged.” On the 20th day of April, 1931, this order appears of record: “It is ordered by the court that this case be filed away with leave to redocket.” On December 23, 1931, a motion was made‘to set aside all orders made in the case since the filing of the mandate, *480 and which, the court sustained, but not till April 13, 1932, and it then expressly directed that the order and judgment, supra, of date December 17, 1930, adjudging the response of appellant sufficient and discharging the rule against it be vacated, set aside and held for naught, and on the same day it issued another rule against appellant, lin substance, the same as the first one.

Three days thereafter and on April 16, 1932, an order was entered making the rule issued three days prior thereto (April 13, 1932) absolute, and adjudged that the responses theretofore filed by appellant as garnishee were insufficient and directed that it pay the amount disclosed therein into court within thirty days after the expiration of that term of the court, and upon its failure to do' so the plaintiff “may have execution against the said garnishee therefor.” On April 25, 1932, appellant responded to that order in substance the same as its response to former rules, and on August 15, 1932, it moved to set aside the order of April 16, 1932, because it was void for reasons stated, but the court overruled its response as well as fits motion, and from which orders and judgments against it this appeal is prosecuted.

On the first consideration of the appeal we reversed the judgment because the record brought here did not disclose the execution of any supersedeas bond when the appeal, supra, of the case of Huffman against Martin was taken, and we held that without the execution of such a bond and the issuance of a supersedeas the payment by the garnishee of the amount in its hands due defendant was a valid acquittance. With the filing of a petition for rehearing by appellee, there was tendered a supplemental record showing the execution of the supersedeas-bond which destroyed the grounds upon which our first opinion herein was based. Some question is made as to the right of appellee to supply the omitted portions of the record after the appeal has been considered and determined by us, and when the omitted parts sought to be supplied affect the merits of the appeal. The question was before us in the case of Owings v. Rider, 242 Ky. 408, 46 S. W. (2d) 506, and in which we declared that an appellee may amend the record, after opinion of this court on appeal, upon a petition for a rehearing filed by him after the appeal was determined adversely to him, and have the case reeon *481 sidered on the amended record; but that no such right exists in favor of the appellant who brought the record to this court. Under the ruling of that opinion it was and is competent for the appellee to amend the record in the manner we have indicated. After concluding to reverse the judgment herein, upon the ground stated, it became unnecessary to consider or determine any other ground relied on for a reversal, and which was not done. But, since our first ground has been eliminated by the filing of the supplemental record by appellee, it becomes necessary to determine whether any other grounds urged for reversal are meritorious.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W.2d 482, 259 Ky. 477, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-columbia-trust-co-v-huffman-kyctapphigh-1935.