Halcomb v. Phipps

240 S.W. 363, 194 Ky. 648, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 2, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 363 (Halcomb v. Phipps) 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
Halcomb v. Phipps, 240 S.W. 363, 194 Ky. 648, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 221 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Hurt

Granting appeals in each case and reversing.

These motions for appeals involve the same persons and the same subject matter. In the first case, that of Halcomb v. Phipps and Hall, decided in the circuit court on February 5, 1920, the record consists of the petition and amended petition in equity, and the motion of Phipps to dissolve the restraining order granted by the clerk of the court and the orders of the court. No evidence was heard, and of course none was brought up in the record. The petition in equity as amended averred that Halcomb was the owner and in the possession of certain two horses and wagon and harness for each horse,, each article of. which was particularly described with the value of each, and all'of the value of $350.00 ; that Hall as the town marshal of Neon, a town of the sixth class, acting under an order of the police court of Neon as his authority, was threatening to take the property from the possession of Halcomb, and to deliver it to Phipps, who was. insolvent, and who forthwith, and before Halcomb could obtain any valid process from a court having jurisdiction of the matter, to prevent it, would take the property out of the state of Kentucky; that Phipps resided only five'miles from the boundary line of the state, and it was twice that distance from where Halcomb and Phipps lived to a place where process could be obtained by Halcomb, from a court of competent jurisdiction, to recover property of that value; that the Neon police court did not have jurisdiction of the property, nor the controversy concerning it, and that its order directing Hall to take the property from Halcomb and deliver it to Phipps, was void, because of the want of jurisdiction of the police court, and that irreparable damage would result to Halcomb by its execution. A restraining order was obtained by Halcomb from the clerk of the circuit court against Phipps and Hall to prevent the execution of the order of the police court. The technical averments necessary to support the granting of a restraining order were made. Neither Hall nor [650]*650Phipps filed an answer but Phipps entered a motion to ■dissolve the restraining order upon the face of the record —that is upon the ground that the facts stated in the petition as amended were insufficient to authorize a restraining order, or any injunctive process. This motion the court sustained and dissolved the restraining order, and thereafter entered a judgment dismissing the'petition as amended, and in addition thereto, at the same time, rendered a judgment to the effect that Phipps was entitled to the immediate possession of the property, and that Hall as marshal of Neon, had wrongfully taken the property from Phipps and delivered it to Halcomb, and that he should immediately take it from Halcomb and deliver it back to Phipps, and the action was then ordered to be stricken from the docket of the court. Prom this judgment an appeal is prayed by Halcomb.

Thereafter at the succeeding term of the court, without any notice to Halcomb, and without the action being reinstated upon the docket, the court entered an order reciting that at a former term an' order had been made directing Hall, as marshal of the town of Neon, to deliver the property to Phipps, and it appearing that Hall had failed to obey the order, and that Halcomb was yet in possession of the property, directed the sheriff, or any constable of the county, to take the property from Hal-comb and deliver it forthwith to Phipps. In pursuance of this order, the sheriff at once took the property from Hal-comb and delivered it to Phipps. Halcomb then brought an action in ordinary against.Phipps to recover the possession of the property and damages for its detention. He alleged that he was the owner of tlie property, describing it with particularity, and the value of each article, and was entitled to its immediate possession, and that Phipps was unlawfully detaining and withholding the possession of it from him, and that he ought to recover damages in the sum of $50.00 for the detention of the property, and that his cause of action occurred within a year last past. He, also, averred that the property had been taken from his possession by virtue of an order of the Letcher circuit court, which had been rendered in the action of Halcomb v'. Phipps and Hall, at a subsequent term of the court and after that action had been dismissed at a former term of the court, and without any notice to Halcomb, and was therefore void. Halcomb obtained an order for immediate delivery of the property [651]*651to Mm, and this order was duly executed. Pbipps demurred generally to the petition. The demurrer was sustained and the petition dismissed, and by the same judgment the court directed a restoration of the property to Phipps. Prom this judgment Halcomb has also prayed an appeal.

Touching the judgment in the equity action of Halcomb v. Phipps and Hall, it will be observed that the only facts presented to the court were contained in the verified petition and amended petition, wherein it appeared that Halcomb was the owner, entitled to the possession and in the possession of the property,’ and the only relief sought by him of the court was to prevent Hall from taking the property from Ms possession by virtue of a void process from the police court of Neon, directed to Hall as marshal of that town, and to deliver it to Phipps, who he alleges was intending and would carry it forthwith out of the jurisdiction of the court, and convert it to his own use; that Phipps was insolvent and that the result would be a loss of the property to Halcomb. These averments were never deMed. Phipps did not so far as appears from the record, make any claim to being the owner of the property, or entitled to its possession, or that the possession of it had ever been wrongfully or otherwise taken from him, or that he had ever been in possession of it, nor is there anything- in the record which would uphold a contention of that kind, if it had been made. The only question presented for a decision was, that, conceding the facts stated in the petition as amended were true, whether such facts were sufficient to authorize the equitable process of injunction, and if the court determined that question adversely to Halcomb, it could only adjudge that the restraining order be dissolved, and that his petition as amended should be dismissed, which would leave the matters in controversy just as they were before the petition in the action was filed. In the absence of any answer or any evidence, the motion to dissolve the restraining order upon the face of the record thereby admitting the facts stated in the petition as amended, to be true, the motion did duty as a demurrer to the petition 'as amended. The court was limited in its decision, whether it decided correctly or erroneously, to whether or not the petition as amended stated facts entitling Hal-comb to a restraining order or injunction. Anything further than this was a judgment upon a matter not em[652]*652braced within the pleadings. The court decided upon the motion to dissolve the restraining order that the facts stated in the petition as amended were not sufficient to authorize a restraining order, and further decided out,side of the issues made in the pleadings, and without support from any source apparent upon the record, that Hal-comb was wrongfully in the possession of the property, and that Phipps was entitled to the possession of it forthwith, and directed that it be taken from Halcomb and delivered to Phipps, and thereafter dismissed the petition as amended and ordered the case stricken from the docket.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 363, 194 Ky. 648, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halcomb-v-phipps-kyctapp-1922.