Howe v. Stevenson

2 S.W. 231, 84 Ky. 576, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 9, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 S.W. 231 (Howe v. Stevenson) 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
Howe v. Stevenson, 2 S.W. 231, 84 Ky. 576, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 104 (Ky. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

JUDGE BENNETT

delivered the opinion op the court.

The appellees, Stevenson & Williams, on the 18th of .December, 1882, sold to the appellee, Bush, real and personal estate, and for the price of which he executed to Williams & Stevenson four notes. Shortly after this transaction, Williams & Stevenson made an assignment of their property to the appellees, Beckner & Winn, for the equal benefit of all their creditors. Among the assets assigned and delivered for said purpose were the four notes, on the appellee Bush. Soon after the assignment for the benefit of creditors by Williams & . Stevenson, the assignees brought suit in the Clark Common Pleas Court for the purpose of having a settlement of said estate, and a distribution of the proceeds among the creditors of the assignors. The [578]*578appellants, as creditors of tlie assignors, were all made defendants to said suit; some of them were served with summons. The Clark Common Pleas Court granted an injunction restraining the creditors of the assignors from proceeding by any other action to enforce their demands. After this order had been made, the appellants brought a joint action in the Montgomery Circuit Court against Williams & Stevenson and their assignees and Y. W. Bush, in which they allege that the sale to Bush of said property was made with the design to prefer him as creditor or partner or surety to the exclusion of Williams & Stevenson’s other creditors, and in contemplation of insolvency, of all of which they allege Bush had notice. It is also alleged that the assignment to Beckner & Winn was intended to secure Bush in his said purchase, and that the assignees refused to assert claim to the property sold Bush by the assignors; and that they had colluded with the grantors for the fraudulent purpose of hindering and delaying their creditors, etc. They asked to have the sale by Williams & Stevenson to Bush treated as an assignment for the benefit of all their creditors, etc.

It appears from the record that the Clark Common Pleas Court, in the case of Beckner & Winn, assignees of Williams & Stevenson, ordered the case of appellants against appellees transferred from the Montgom- ■ ery Circuit Court to the Clark Common Pleas Court, to be consolidated with the case of said assignees, which was done.

After said transfer, appellee Bush filed his separate answer to appellants’ petition. In his answer he ad[579]*579mits the sale of said property to him, and the subsequent assignment by Williams & Stevenson for the equal benefit of their creditors, but denies specifically and fully all of appellants’ allegations in reference to the purpose and intention with which said sale was made, and in reference to the purpose and intention with which said assignment was made. Beckner & Flanagan, the latter having been substituted as assignee, filed separate answers. The latter denied all of the allegations in reference to "the intention with which the assignment was made. Bush’s answer also set up affirmative matter which was material. The appellants did not reply to the answer of Bush. The case was submitted to the court for hearing without proof, and the court dismissed appellants’ petition. They have appealed to this court.

The court, if it had jurisdiction, did right in dismissing the petition; first, because all of the allegations of the petition, in reference to the purpose and intention with which the sale was made, being denied, and the burden of proof being on the appellants to establish the truth of said allegations, there was a failure of proof ; second, all -of the allegations of the petition in reference to the intention with which the assignment was made being denied, there was a failure of proof as to that matter.

Previous to the filing of the answers, the appellants moved the Clark Common Pleas Court to remand the case to the Montgomery Circuit Court upon the ground that the Clark Common Pleas Court had no jurisdiction of the case. The motion was overruled. Subsequently the appellants moved the said court to take their peti[580]*580tion for confessed, because there was no answer filed. This motion was overruled, and the appellees were allowed to file answers.

The question is, had the Clark Court of Common Pleas the right to have the appellants’ case transferred from the Montgomery Circuit Court to the Clark Court of Common Pleas, to be consolidated with the case of Williams & Stevenson’s assignees pending in the latter court? If not, then the motion of appellants to have the papers of said case remanded to the Montgomery Circuit Court should have prevailed; and for the error of the Common Pleas Court in overruling the motion, the case will have to be reversed, unless the appellants waived their right to take advantage of the error by subsequently moving the court for a submission of the case, and for judgment by default.

Section 210 of the Civil Code of Practice provides: “If attachments levied on the same property, in whole or in part, be pending in different courts; 1. If the courts be of equal jurisdiction, either of them, or during vacation the judge thereof, may order the removal of so many of said attachments, and of the actions in which they may have been issued, as may be necessary to have all of them in one of said courts.”

The third subsection provides that such order may be made upon motion of any party to either of said actions after reasonable notice to all other parties to said actions or to their attorneys.

The record before us fails to show that an attachment was issued or levied in the case brought by appellants against the appellees in the Montgomery Circuit Court. Indeed, the affidavit of one of the appellants shows that [581]*581no attachment was issued; and nothing appearing to the contrary, we are bound to conclude that there was no attachment issued or levied. Under the provision of the Code supra, it is a condition precedent to the power of one court to order the transfer of cases from another court, under the circumstances therein provided for, that an attachment should have been levied. That not having been done in the case of appellants pending in the Montgomery Circuit Court, the action of the Clark Court of Common Pleas in ordering the transfer was wrong, and the motion of the appellants to have said order set aside and the case remanded to the Montgomery Circuit Court should have prevailed.

The proper practice in such a case was for the assignees of Williams & Stevenson to have appeared in the Montgomery Circuit Court, and have filed their answer to appellants’ petition, disclosing the fact to the court that their suit was pending in the Clark Court of Common Pleas for the purpose of settling the estate of Williams & Stevenson as an insolvent estate, and for distributing the proceeds equally among their creditors, and that appellants were party defendants to said action ; and that the creditors of said Williams & Stevenson had, by the order of said court, been enjoined from proceeding by any other action to enforce their demands. Thereupon it would have been the .duty of the Montgomery Circuit Court to suspend proceedings in said case until the rights of the parties could be determined in the action pending in the Clark Court of Common Pleas.

Now there is no doubt that the appellants could have raised the same question, and set up the same state of [582]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.W. 231, 84 Ky. 576, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-stevenson-kyctapp-1886.