Fitzpatrick v. Costigan

19 S.W.2d 983, 230 Ky. 365, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 21, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 983 (Fitzpatrick v. Costigan) 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
Fitzpatrick v. Costigan, 19 S.W.2d 983, 230 Ky. 365, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 84 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner-—

Affirming.

Thomas W. Fitzpatrick, his wife, Susie M. Fitzpatrick, and S. P. Greenwade have appealed from a judgment ordering their property sold to satisfy liens thereon, and from an order confirming the sales made thereunder. This action was ¡begun by John Costigan and 12 other lien creditors of the appellants to enforce liens they had on the property of the appellants. The appellants and 14 of their lienholders other than the plaintiffs were made defendants. Appellants were heavily indebted. With commendable diligence, they endeavored, to pay and did pay many of these complaining creditors, so that John Costigan and many of his associates have been paid in full, and now serve no purpose here, other than to lend their names to the style of this appeal.

Their first attack is upon the judgment, which they allowed to go against them by default. They say that personal judgment was taken by many of the defendants upon their answers and cross-petitions without the appellants having been served with process thereon. The defendants and cross-petitioners who took personal judgments and the circumstances under which they took them are: on May 19, 1926, W. C. Clay filed his amended answer, which by order of the court was made a cross-petition against the defendants, now the appellants, and process was awarded thereon. This was served on Thomas W. Fitzpatrick and Gusie M. Fitzpatrick on June 9,1926, and upon S. P. Greenwade on June 23,1926. Sally G. McCormick took similar steps and was awarded similar orders on May 24, 1926. The process issued in her behalf was served on Thomas W. Fitzpatrick and Susie M. Fitzpatrick on June 9, 1926. She took judgment against Thomas W. Fitzpatrick only, and that has since been paid. A like step was taken by Laura Gibbons on May 18, 1926, and the process awarded her was served on Thomas W. Fitzpatrick on June 9, 1926, and he was the only one against whom she took a personal judgment. *368 The Traders’ National Bank took such a step on May 24, 1926, and the process awarded it was served on Thomas W. Fitzpatrick and 'Susie M. Fitzpatrick on June 9, and upon S. P. Greenwade on June 15. These were the only personal judgments taken. They were taken on May 28, 1927, and at that time these parties were before the court, so that disposes of the first contention.

Their next complaint is that liens were adjudg’ed to the Mt. Sterling National Bank, the city of Mt. Sterling, T. C. Lyons, Charles P. Humphries, Nellie Greenwade, Fila R. Thomas, and Laura Gibbons upon the properties of appellants before appellants had been served with process or entered their appearance to these claims, and without these lienholders having been required to plead to the petition, and without their having done so. As to Ella R. Thomas, the lien adjudged her was adjudged to be for the use and benefit of Betty Fitzpatrick, Ella R. Thomas having on December 11, 1925, assigned to Betty Fitzpatrick the benefit of an execution Ella R. Thomas then had in the hands of the sheriff of Montgomery county. Betty Fitzpatrick was the equitable owner of this execution, and she had been made a defendant when the petition was filed. Appellants cannot complain here of any judgment rendered in favor of the Mt. Sterling National Bank, as they have not made it n party to this appeal. The others to whom liens were adjudged, and of which the appellants have complained, had filed their pleadings and asserted their liens upon the following dates: Nellie Greenwade, city of Mt. Sterling, Laura Gibbons and Charles Humphries, on May 18, 1926; T. C. Lyons, on May 27, 1927; and Betty Fitzpatrick, on November 29, 1926. In this answer, she asserted the Ella R. Thomas execution. Thus it appears that appellants were simply mistaken about the condition of the record. Plaintiffs and cross-petitioners were entitled to judgments, however, whether these defendant lienholders answered or not. See McKibben v. Worthington, 103 Ky. 356, 45 S. W. 233, 20 Ky. Law Rep. 61. This disposes of the second- complaint.

As we have said, the appellants worked hard to pay off .their debts. This suit was begun by a number of junior lienholders, and of these they had paid all, except two, and seerq to have satisfied those two; hence they may have felt, that they were in no further danger, and.as thjs. judgment was entered, at the instance and request *369 of parties who had originally 'been sued as defendants, appellants question it, and contend they had no right to the judgments entered; but they overlook the fact that these parties who had originally been made defendants, had filed their answers, asserted their liens, and prayed that their answers be made cross-petitions against appellants, for process thereon,, and appellants were brought before the court on these cross-pettions by service of process, as we have shown above. By these steps, these original defendants, assumed the role of plaintiffs, and were as fully empowered and authorized to take up the battle, when the original plaintiffs abandoned it, and thereafter to carry it on to conclusion, as if they had been plaintiffs originally. See Lorton v. Ashbrook, 220 Ky. 830, 295 S. W. 1027. That disposes of their third contention.

Their next complaint is that in the original petition it is not alleged that the debts secured by the liens held by the senior lienholders who were made defendants were due. Therefore appellants say the petition was so defective as to not authorize or support the entry of a judgment upon it.- There were divers liens on this property, and few of them were of the same rank. It seems that many of them were due when the action was begun, and all the debts of those lienholders who took personal judgments were due, as appears to us from the answers and cross-petitions which they filed; but there were some debts that were not due. and in the preparation of the petition and of these various answers and cross-petitions steps were taken to secure a sale of this property, upon which the debts were not due, subject to the lien of the prior or superior lienholders. Such a.course is authorized by subsection 3 of section 694 of the Civil Code. Tn their attack upon this judgment, the appellants have attacked this much of subsection 3 of section 694 as unconstitutional :

“But the holder of a prior lien may enforce the same when the debt thereby secured is due, notwithstanding the existence of inferior liens, whether the debts secured thereby are due or not; and the holder of an inferior lien, when the' debt thereby secured is due, may enforce the same by a sale of land subject to a prior lien or liens thereon, where the debt or debts secured thereby.are not yet due.”

*370 These words were added to section 694 by an act passed in 1916. See chapter 105, page 656, Acts of 19.16. This act, the appellants contend, violates section 51 of the Constitution of Kentucky, because the title of the act is defective. That title is, “An act to amend section No. 694 of the Civil Code of Practice,” end appellants say this was insufficient, and according to them this title should have been, “An act to amend, extend and re-enact subsection 3 of section No.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 983, 230 Ky. 365, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzpatrick-v-costigan-kyctapphigh-1929.