Galbraith v. Kirby

109 S.W.2d 1168, 21 Tenn. App. 303, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 20, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 109 S.W.2d 1168 (Galbraith v. Kirby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galbraith v. Kirby, 109 S.W.2d 1168, 21 Tenn. App. 303, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 35 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

ANDERSON, J.

These causes were consolidated and tried together in the chancery court of Knox county. In the first above mentioned the appellant, Elizabeth Price Galbraith, on November 2, 1934, filed her original bill against the defendants, Mrs. Ada Kirby, E. N. Willard, Jr., in his capacity as deputy sheriff, Dan Kelly and John H. Scott, in their respective capacities as justices of the peace, seeking to have a judgment on a note rendered against her and in favor of the defendant, Mrs. Ada Kirby, decreed to be void and its enforcement perpetually enjoined on the ground that no process had *305 been served upon her in the suit in which said judgment was rendered and that she had no notice thereof.

In the other case the bill was filed by the appellant, Mrs. Galbraith, against Miss Lou Smith, and said deputy sheriff and justices of the peace in which she sought the same relief with respect to a judgment rendered against her and in favor of Miss Lou Smith in the justice of the peace court upon a plea of debt due by note in the sum of $999.99.

Identically the same pleadings were filed by the parties in both causes, and by consent the two were consolidated and tried together upon the same testimony.

On November 30, 1934, Mrs. Ada Kirby and Miss Lou Smith each filed an answer and cross-bill in the cause in which she was a party defendant. It is not necessary to a determination of the questions presented by the appeals to notice the contents of the answers further than to say that in each the material averments of the bill were denied. The cross-bills named as cross-defendants E. N. Willard, Jr., deputy sheriff, J. Wesley Brewer, sheriff of Knox county, and the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, surety on the bonds of said sheriff and his deputy. In each cross-bill it was averred in substance that the defendant deputy sheriff had made a false return of the warrants in the justice of the peace suits, in that he had returned the same as having been executed upon the appellant Mrs. Elizabeth Galbraith and her husband, J. J. Galbraith (the latter having been sued jointly with his wife in both suits), when in fact no such service had been had upon Mrs. Gailbraith. It was further averred in each of said cross-bills that “at the time the said E. N. Willard, Jr., deputy sheriff, admitted his false return in this case it was too late to issue other process on said note, due to the fact that the statute of limitations had run against the note sued on, and that by reason of said false return made by E. N. Willard, deputy sheriff, this cross-complainant has been damaged in that she has not secured a valid judgment against Elizabeth Price Galbraith.”

The respective cross-bills prayed for a judgment in the amount of damage sustained by the cross-complainant against the sheriff, his deputy and the surety on their respective bonds.

It is unnecessary to notice joint demurrers to the cross-bill filed by the last named three, the demurrers having been overruled. Answers were thereupon filed by these cross-defendants setting up the same defenses as were made in the demurrers and averring that neither cross-complainant had suffered any damage and that they must be required to pursue and exhaust their lawful remedies against the original complainant, Mrs. Elizabeth Price Galbraith, before they could maintain their cross-bills against them.

On May 1, 1935, Mrs. Kirby and Miss Smith each amended the cross-bill previously filed by her so as to make the original complain *306 ant, Mrs. Elizabeth Price Galbraith, a cross-defendant thereto and so as to add the following allegation: “The original process issued before the justice of the peace against Elizabeth Price Galbraith in favor of this cross-complainant, was issued and the judgment entered within one year next before the date of this order and cross-complainant charges that in view of the allegations of the original bill by the original complainant, cross-complainant is entitled to judgment in this cause against the original complainant for the amount of the judgment before the justice of the peace, together with the costs of said cause.”

The prayer of each cross-bill was amended so as to pray “that judgment be rendered against the said Elizabeth Price Galbraith in this cause for the full sum of said judgment rendered before the justice of the peace which she now charges to be void.” The appellant, Mrs. Galbraith, demurred to each cross-bill as amended upon the ground that it affirmatively appeared that the causes of action of the respective cross-complainants were barred by the six-year statute of limitations.

Upon the hearing the chancellor held that the judgments rendered in the justice of the peace case in both suits were void because of the failure of the executing officer to make personal service of process upon Elizabeth Price Galbraith, and he accordingly decreed that the collection of each of said judgments be perpetually enjoined as to her but without affecting in any way said judgments against J. J. Galbraith, her husband and codefendant in the two suits before the justice of the peace.

He further decreed that the amendments to the two cross-bills filed respectively by Mrs. Kirby and Miss Lou Smith making Elizabeth Price Galbraith a party defendant, having been made within one year after the issuance of the summons on August 13, 1934, in the respective suits before the justice of the peace, the causes of action in favor of Mrs. Kirby and Miss Smith respectively were therefore not barred by the statute of limitations. He accordingly overruled and disallowed the demurrer of Elizabeth Price Galbraith and rendered a decree against her in favor of Mrs. Kirby for $752 and interest from May 1, 1935, and a decree against her in favor of Miss Lou Smith for the sum of $999.99, having limited the amount of the recovery awarded to the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace.

The chancellor further held that no right of action had accrued in favor of Mrs. Kirby or Miss Smith against the two officers and their surety, for the reason that each “still had her proper and sufficient remedy against the defendant, Elizabeth Price Galbraith, the one year time from the date of the issuance of the summons before the justice of the peace, not having expired.” He accordingly dismissed the cross-bills against these defendants but without prejudice to the *307 rights of the cross-complainants to any possible right of action which might subsequently accrue by reason of the failure of .the deputy sheriff to serve process upon the said Elizabeth Price Galbraith.

Mrs. Galbraith appealed from so much of the decree as awarded a recovery against her, and Mrs. Kirby and Miss. Smith appealed from so much .thereof as dismissed their respective cross-bills against the officers and their sureties.

The primary, and what we conceive to be the determinative, question is made by the challenge of Mrs. Galbraith to the action of the chancellor in declining to hold that the causes of action alleged in the respective cross-bills as amended were not barred by the statute of limitations.

There is no controversy about the facts'upon which this question must be determined. They are stated in the assignments of error and brief filed on behalf of the appellant, Mrs. Galbraith, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 1168, 21 Tenn. App. 303, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galbraith-v-kirby-tennctapp-1937.