Jackson v. Beattyville Water Department

278 S.W.3d 633, 2009 Ky. App. LEXIS 28, 2009 WL 414302
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 20, 2009
Docket2008-CA-000421-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 278 S.W.3d 633 (Jackson v. Beattyville Water Department) 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
Jackson v. Beattyville Water Department, 278 S.W.3d 633, 2009 Ky. App. LEXIS 28, 2009 WL 414302 (Ky. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

STUMBO, Judge.

Lucille Jackson appeals from an order of the Lee Circuit Court remanding her action to Lee District Court upon finding that Jackson failed to establish a prima facie case that her damages exceeded the $4,000 amount required to confer jurisdiction on the circuit court. She contends that the circuit court abused its discretion in transferring the matter to district court because the pleading of the jurisdictional amount in the complaint establishes subject matter jurisdiction which subsequent events cannot defeat. For the reasons discussed below, we reverse and remand the order on appeal.

On May 30, 2006, Jackson filed a complaint in Lee Circuit Court against Jason Horn and Beattyville Water Department. She alleged entitlement to an easement by necessity across a parcel of real property owned by Horn for the purpose of accessing a landlocked cemetery in which she possessed an ownership interest. She further claimed that Beattyville Water Company, (hereinafter “the Water Company”), negligently repaired one or more water lines resulting in damage to some headstones and footstones at the cemetery. The complaint demanded the judicial recognition of an easement by necessity and compensatory damages in the amount of $7,500.

*635 Horn answered the complaint by denying that the cemetery is landlocked and further denying that he owned the parcel over which Jackson sought to establish an easement. Jackson moved for a default judgment against the Water Company which had not responded. After obtaining leave of court to file an untimely response to the complaint, the Water Company answered with a general denial.

Discovery followed in the form of interrogatories answered by Jackson. Based on the discovery, the Water Company moved on April 12, 2007, for dismissal of Jackson’s action or, in the alternative, for summary judgment. The motion was based on the Water Company’s claim that Jackson would not be able to prove damages in excess of the $4,000 jurisdictional amount at trial. A hearing on the motion was conducted on April 19, 2007, where Jackson argued that her allegation in the complaint of damages in excess of $4,000.00 should suffice to establish jurisdiction.

In response, the circuit court ordered Jackson to provide supplemental interrogatories setting out precisely what damages she had incurred including her actual cost of repair to the headstones and footstones. The answers were to be provided within 20 days, i.e., by May 10, 2007. After Jackson filed the supplemental answers on April 25, 2007, and mailed a copy to defense counsel’s last known address, an order was rendered on May 2, 2007, directing her to produce the supplement answers which she had already filed. Jackson would later contend that the order, which was prepared by defense counsel, exceeded the scope of the circuit court’s original oral ruling at the April 19, 2007, hearing.

On May 2, 2007, Jackson’s counsel received a notice that a status conference was set for May 16, 2007. Jackson’s counsel filed a motion to continue since she would be involved in a jury trial in another county on that date. No court action on the motion appears in the record, and the hearing was conducted on May 16, 2007.

At the hearing, defense counsel stated that he had not received any supplemental answers to interrogatories from Jackson. Jackson’s counsel was not present. After discussing the matter with defense counsel, the circuit court directed counsel to prepare an order transferring the action to Lee District Court based on Jackson’s failure to establish a prima facie case that her damages exceeded the jurisdictional amount.

On June 2, 2007, Jackson tendered a motion to set aside the transfer order, noting that she had filed supplemental answers to interrogatories as directed by the court and which were found in the record. As of that date, however, no written order transferring the matter appeared in the record. On February 25, 2008, the court rendered an order overruling Jackson’s motion to set aside the order transferring the action to district court. In that same order, the court ordered that the action be transferred to Lee District Court. This appeal followed. 1

*636 Jackson now argues that the Lee Circuit Court committed reversible error in transferring the action to Lee District Court based on Jackson’s failure to establish a prima facie case of damages in excess of the $4,000 amount required to establish jurisdiction in the circuit court. Citing the unpublished opinion of Ogburn v. Earl Floyd Ford-Mercury, Inc., 2007 WL 2812593 (Ky.App.2007), 2 she maintains that the amount of damages set out in the complaint establishes jurisdiction and that “once a court acquires jurisdiction ... such jurisdiction cannot be lost or defeated by subsequent events.” Id. She notes that her complaint alleged damages of $7,500 and refutes defense counsel’s assertion at the healing that he had not received any supplemental interrogatory answers from her. The focus of her argument on this issue is that the filing of the complaint alleging damages in excess of the jurisdictional amount, coupled with the filing of supplemental interrogatory answers in support of the complaint, are sufficient to establish jurisdiction with the circuit court. Jackson also argues that the court erred in dismissing Horn from the action without any motion or notice to her.

We have closely examined the written arguments and the law and are persuaded that Jackson’s complaint, coupled with her answers to interrogatories, was sufficient to establish jurisdiction in Lee Circuit Court. The circuit court is a court of general jurisdiction and has original jurisdiction of all justiciable civil causes of action not exclusively vested in some other court. Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 23A.010(1). Jurisdiction vests with the district court in civil cases in which the “amount in controversy does not exceed four-thousand dollars ($4,000), exclusive of interest and costs[.]” KRS 24A.120. Ergo, the circuit court has original jurisdiction in civil actions where the amount in controversy exceeds $4,000.

While we agree with Jackson that there is a paucity of caselaw on this issue, in Dalton v. First National Bank of Grayson, 712 S.W.2d 954 (Ky.App.1986), a panel of this Court recognized the statutory prerequisites for establishing jurisdiction in circuit court by holding that a circuit court lacks subject matter jurisdiction where the amount in controversy does not exceed the jurisdictional amount. “Furthermore, we find that the circuit court lacked jurisdiction over the subject matter since the amount in dispute never exceeded the [then] $2,500.00 jurisdictional amount.” Id., at 959.

In the matter at bar, the amount in dispute exceeds the $4,000 jurisdictional amount set out in KRS Chapters 23A and 24A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 S.W.3d 633, 2009 Ky. App. LEXIS 28, 2009 WL 414302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-beattyville-water-department-kyctapp-2009.