Fitzpatrick v. Young

169 S.W. 530, 160 Ky. 5, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 1, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 530 (Fitzpatrick v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzpatrick v. Young, 169 S.W. 530, 160 Ky. 5, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 398 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Refusing writ:

This is an application to this court by the petitioner Fitzpatrick asking that we issue a writ of prohibition against the Hon. W. A. Young, judge of the circuit court for the 21st district, to restrain him as judge of the court from entertaining jurisdiction of an appeal prosecuted to the circuit court of Montgomery County from the county court of that county.

The question arises in this way: In May, 1911, the petitioner, Fitzpatrick, was adjudged, in a proper proceeding had in the Montgomery County Court, to be a person of unsound mind and incompetent to manage Ms estate. Thereafter, in January, 1914, by other proceedings duly had in the Montgomery County Court, it was adjudged that he was restored to his right mind and entitled to the custody and control of his estate. A few days after this judgment was entered in the county court, A. S. Hart, who had been appointed by the Montgomery County Court as committee for Fitzpatrick, and who was acting as committee when the judgment of restoration was entered, prosecuted, in connection with the wife of Fitzpatrick, an appeal to the Montgomery Circuit Court by executing before the clerk of that court an appeal bond and filing a certified copy of the judgment of restoration entered in the Montgomery County Court. When the certified copy of the judgment was filed with the clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court and the appeal bond executed before him, the clerk issued a supersedeas directing the county judge of Montgomery County to stay all proceedings on the judgment of restoration and to transmit to the clerk’s office of his court all the original papers in the proceeding. A. summons was also issued against Fitzpatrick to appear before the Montgomery Circuit Court on the first day of its April term to answer the appeal.

[7]*7It appears from the record that the January term of the Montgomery Circuit Court convened a few days after the appeal was prosecuted, and on January 20th Fitzpatrick, by his counsel, appeared in the circuit court for the sole purpose of moving the court to put the appeal on the docket for the January term of the court. This motion the court overruled, to which ruling exception was- taken.

On the first day of the April term of the court, that being the term to which the appeal was an appearance and to which Fitzpatrick had been summoned to answer the appeal, counsel for Fitzpatrick came into court and entered a demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court and also moved the court to dismiss the appeal. The judge, entertaining the view that the circuit court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action and that the appeal was properly prosecuted, overruled the demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court and also the motion to dismiss the appeal. Thereupon, during the April term of the court, the case, on the issue as to whether Fitzpatrick was of sound mind and capable of managing his estate, went to trial before a jury, the trial resulting in the failure of the jury to agree. Upon the discharge of the jury the case was continued to another term of the court, and pending the postponement the petition for this writ of prohibition was filed in this court.

Although other questions are presented for our consideration, the 'principal matter to be decided is, did the Montgomery Circuit Court have jurisdiction to entertain the appeal taken from the judgment of the county court adjudging Fitzpatrick to be a- person of sound mind and competent to manage his estate?

We, are, however, met at the threshold with the proposition that the writ should be denied because the right to secure a writ of prohibition, if one existed, was waived.

But we do not think the petitioner by anything done in his behalf in the circuit court, waived his right to apply to this court for the writ of prohibition. It is true that a motion in his behalf was made -in the Montgomery Circuit Court to docket the appeal before he was regularly before the court and before the case was due to be put on the docket of the court for trial, but it appears that this effort was made to docket the case for the sole purpose of challenging the jurisdiction of the court as soon as the appeal was docketed. When the court over[8]*8ruled the motion to put the appeal on the docket, no further steps were taken in it by either party until the first da.y of the next term of court, when the jurisdiction of the court was assailed in the manner hereinbefore set forth.

It will thus be seen that the petitioner at the earliest possible moment put in issue the jurisdiction of the court.

The circuit court has under the statute original jurisdiction of proceedings like this, and of course if the petitioner had voluntarily submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court he could not thereafter question, by a writ of prohibition, the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the case; but when he challenged at the first opportunity the jurisdiction of the court and sought to have the appeal dismissed because the court had no jurisdiction of it, he saved in every way that he could save his right to question in this proceeding the jurisdiction of the court. If in fact the court had no jurisdiction, the petitioner did not waive his right to raise the question by submitting to a trial of the appeal after the court had overruled the timely motion made to dismiss it for want of jurisdiction. Hughes v. Hardesty, 13 Bush, 364; Davidson v. Johnson, 113 Ky., 202.

Another reason advanced why the writ should not go is that the petitioner had the right of appeal to this court from an adverse judgment in the circuit court, and, therefore, had an adequate remedy through the ordinary channels of the law without resorting to the extraordinary writ sought to be here obtained.

Section 479 of the Code provides that “The writ of prohibition is an order of the circuit court to an inferior court of limited jurisdiction, prohibiting it from proceeding in a matter out of its jurisdiction; ’ ’ and this court, in pursuing the authority granted to it by section 110 of the Constitution “to issue such writs as may be necessary to give it a general control of inferior jurisdictions,” has, with few exceptions, been controlled in the issual of the writ by the Code provision limiting it to cases in which the court against which the writ was sought was proceeding out of its jurisdiction. Save in a few exceptional eases, when the lower court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties and there was an adequate remedy by appeal, this court has refused to issue a writ. White v. Kirby, 147 Ky., 496; Rush v. Denhard, 138 Ky., 235; Carey v. Sampson, 150 Ky., 460. But we know of no [9]*9instance in which the writ has been denied when it appeared that the circuit court was proceeding without authority and the parties had not waived their right to raise the question. Campbellsville Telephone Co. v. Patterson, 114 Ky., 52; Carey v. Sampson, 150 Ky., 460; Jenkins v. Berry, 119 Ky., 350; Renshaw v. Cook, 129 Ky., 347.

With these matters out of the way, we are brought to consider whether the Montgomery Circuit Court had jurisdiction of the appeal. If it did, the writ must be denied. If it did not, it should be granted.

It is conceded that the right of appeal is a creature of the statute, and that unless the right to prosecute an appeal can be found in the statute an appeal will not lie.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 530, 160 Ky. 5, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzpatrick-v-young-kyctapp-1914.