Gibson Coal & Coke Co. v. Allen

280 F. 28, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1751
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1922
DocketNo. 3622
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 280 F. 28 (Gibson Coal & Coke Co. v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson Coal & Coke Co. v. Allen, 280 F. 28, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1751 (6th Cir. 1922).

Opinion

DONAHUE, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] It appears from the certified copy of the opinion of the Kentucky Court of Appeals in Webb v. Webb’s Gdn., 178 Ky. 152, 198 S. W. 736, introduced in evidence upon the trial of this' case in the District Court, that the Kentucky Court of Appeals reversed as erroneous the decree of the Floyd circuit court, ordering the sale of the minerals and mining rights belonging to the infant children of A. P. Webb, deceased, in and underlying the 377.40 acres described in the petition as tract No. 776, for the reason that “the provisions attached to the minerals and rights adjudged to be sold are unreasonable, and are calculated to greatly impair the value of the surface of the land for any purpose which the infant or any one to whom he might sell it, could subject it,” citing in support of its judgment Hays v. Wicker, 161 Ky. 706, 171 S. W. 447.

It is now insisted, however, that this court should permit the defendant coal companies to release and reconvey to plaintiffs these excessive and unreasonable mining rights in the surface, so as to cure the error in the decree ordering the sale, and permit it to stand as to the minerals and reasonable mining rights in the surface. As the record comes to this court, that judgment and decree was reversed in its entirety by the court of last resort in Kentucky. Before this action was commenced that decree had passed into the “limbo of things that were but are not.” It was to all intents and purposes the same as if no such judgment had ever been made or entered by the Floyd circuit court. This court has no power to reinstate or revive that decree, either in whole or in part. The judgment of reversal entered by the Kentucky Court of Appeals is conclusive, not only upon the parties to that appeal, but also upon this court, and the rights of the respective parties to this action must be determined in accordance therewith and in obedience to the statute of Kentucky under favor of which this action is brought.

[2] It is also claimed by the appellants that this action was not brought by the twin sisters Maggie and Mary Webb within 12 months after they had attained the age of 21 years. No such statute of limitation is pleaded by either of these defendants in bar of the right of these plaintiffs to maintain this suit. It is true that the answer of the Gibson Coal & Coke Company does aver that this petition was not filed within 5 years after the making and entering of the decree confirming the sale, and “pleads and relies upon the : itute of limitations in such cases made and provided in bar of plaintiffs’ right to recover herein” ; but “the statute of limitations in such cases made and provided” has no application whatever to the commencement of a suit by infants under section-391 of the Civil Code of Kentucky to reverse, vacate, or modify a judgment of the circuit court within 12 months after they have reached the age of 21 years. Section 391 is a separate and distinct statute of limitation, or rather a statute exempting infants from other statutes of limitations that would bar an action by a person of [33]*33'full age at the time the judgment or decree was entered, and granting to infants a full 12 months after reaching their majority in which to attack a judgment prejudicial to their interests and secured during their minority.

[3] If, however, the defendants, or either of them, had pleaded this statute of limitation as to infants in bar of this action, there is no evidence in this record that would sustain such an averment. These twin sisters were born January 8, 1896; this action was commenced January 7, 1918. Under the decision of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, in Erwin v. Benton, 120 Ky. 536, 87 S. W. 291, 9 Ann. Cas. 264-, these twin sisters became 21 years of age on the day preceding their twenty-first birthday. The statute provides that they shall have 12 months after that time in which to bring this action. Certainly it would do violence to the language of this statute if this 12 monhs were reckoned from the 6th of January, 1917, for they had not arrived at 21 years of age until the 7th of January of that year, and by the express terms of the statute the time must be reckoned after the time they arrive at the age of 21 years.

The usual rule for the computation of time is to exclude the first day and count the last. Section 681 of the Kentucky Civil Code would seem to declare the same rule in that state. However, since that statute was passed the Kentucky Court of Appeals has decided in several cases that, when the computation is to be made from the act done, the day in which the act is done must be included, but when the computation is to be from the day itself, and not from the act done, then the day iii which the act was done must be excluded. Chiles v. Smith’s Heirs, 13 B. Mon. (Ky.) 460; Board of Councilmen v. Farmers’ Bank, 105 Ky. 811, 49 S. W. 811; Mooar v. Covington City National Bank, 80 Ky. 305.

Arriving at the age of 21 years was not an act done or performed by these infants or by any one else, like the entering of a decree or the serving of a notice, hut, on the contrary, was a day or date in their lives, which without action on the part of any one, and by operation of law only, marked their transition from infancy to adult and responsible age. Applying, then, the rule as above stated to the facts in this case, it necessarily follows that the 12 months allowed by this statute for the commencement of this suit must be reckoned after the day or date upon which these infants became 21 years of age.

[4] It is also insisted that, notwithstanding they were infants and unmarried at the time this decree confirming the sale was entered against them, these two plaintiffs cannot maintain this action under the provisions of section 391. because they are now married women. That section in part reads as follows:

‘‘An infant — other than a married woman — may, within twelve months after attaining the age of twenty-one years, show cause against a judgment.”

This record conclusively establishes the fact that they did perfect an appeal to the Kentucky Court of Appeals and procure a reversal of the judgment and decree ordering the sale of their property; that court, however, refused to set aside the sale to the Gibson Coal & Coke Company, for the reason that it did not affirmatively appear from the [34]*34record of that case, which was all that was before the Court of Appeals, that the Gibson Coal & Coke Company was not a bona fide purchaser. It is doubtful, therefore, if it is necessary to have recourse to this statute in order to sustain the right of these plaintiffs to bring and maintain this action. However that may be, this section is not subject to the construction contended for by counsel for appellant. It is clear that the statute has reference to a particular status existing at the time the judgment is rendered.

In the case of Eversole v. First Nat. Bank, 136 Ky. 362, 124 S. W. 360, the infant was a married woman at the time she signed the mortgage upon which the suit was brought and was also a married woman at the time the judgment was rendered upon that mortgage. Therefore that case has no application to the facts in this case. Maggie and Mary Webb were infants at the time this judgment, confirming the sale of their lands, was obtained against them. They were not married until perhaps 6 months before they arrived at 21 years of age. The purpose and intent of this statute was to protect the rights of infants, other than married women.

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280 F. 28, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 1751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-coal-coke-co-v-allen-ca6-1922.