Jeffers v. Taylor

198 S.W. 1160, 178 Ky. 392, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 740
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 14, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 1160 (Jeffers v. Taylor) 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
Jeffers v. Taylor, 198 S.W. 1160, 178 Ky. 392, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 740 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Miller

Affirming.

On September 22, 1911, the appellee, W. B. Taylor, bought 300 shares of the capital stock of the Central Life Insurance Company for -which he paid $150.00 in cash, and gave the company his note for. $2,550.00, the balance of the purchase money. About the same time the appellee, J. W. Vicars, bought 500 shares of the' same issue of stock for which he executed to the company his note for $1,250.00.

’ On August 9, 1913, Taylor and Vicars filed separate ' actions in the Pike circuit court against the insurance company to cancel their notes, upon the ground of fraud committed by the company’s .agent in making the.sales to them. They obtained judgments in the circuit court, but upon appeal this court reversed the judgments for the reason that neither petition stated a cause of action. See Central Life Insurance Co. v. Taylor, 164 Ky. 844; Central Life Insurance Co. v. Vicars, 164 Ey. 848. Upon the return of the actions to the circuit court the petitions were dismissed pursuant to the mandate of this court.

On January 15, 1916, the appellant, J. W. Jeffers was appointed receiver of the Central Life Insurance' Company; and, on March 3, 1916, he filed these actions against Taylor and Vicars in the Pike circuit court to recover judgments upon the notes which they had given the company. Taylor was clerk of the Pike circuit court.

The petitions were prepared in Frankfort by Scott & Hamilton, the attorneys for the receiver, and were by them, on May 2, 1916, forwarded by mail to the clerk of the Pike circuit court, at Pikeville, accompanied by. [394]*394a letter to the clerk requesting him to file the petitions, and enclosing him the state tax thereon. The letter to' the clerk also contained this sentence: “Please have summons issued a,t once, and send us copies of demurrers and pleadings that may he filed in the cases, and advise us when these cases are set down for trial.”

Taylor filed the petitions on May 3, and issued summons thereon, which were duly served. On May 17, 1916, Taylor and Vicars filed their answers traversing the allegations of the petitions and charging 'fraud in the sale of the stock; and, by way of counterclaim, Taylor asked that his note be cancelled and that he have judgment for the $450.00 which he had paid in cash. /

On July 8, 1916, the forty-eighth day of the May term, and on the motions of the defendants, the allegations of the answers were taken as true and the notes were cancelled upon the ground that they had been obtained by fraud. Taylor did not advise Scott & Hamilton that he and Vicars had filed their answers or that the order of July 8th cancelling the notes had been entered.

On October 13,1916, Scott & Hamilton mailed to Taylor orders dismissing the cases against Taylor and Vicars without prejudice; asking Taylor to show the' orders to the defendants or their attorneys; and when they had been entered to return to the attorneys the exhibits filed with the petitions.

Three days later — on October 16th, 1916 — Taylor and Vicars moved the court to submit the cases; and, no objection being made the court, on October 18th, entered a judgment dismissing the petition at the plaintiffs’ cost, and struck the cases from the docket. Not hearing from Taylor, appellant’s attorneys wrote him on October 26th, inquiring if the orders of dismissal had been received and entered, and again requesting that the exhibits be returned. To this further request Taylor paid . no attention. It was not until January 26th, 1917, that, appellant’s counsel learned that the notes had been cancelled and the actions dismissed. In the meantime the September term, 1916, of the court had intervened and expired.

At the following'February term of the Pike circuit court appellant entered motions to set aside the judgments and filed his grounds for a new trial upon the • ground of fraud practiced by the defendants and un[395]*395avoidable casualty and misfortune which had prevented him and his attorneys from attending the trial. In support of his motions he filed several affidavits setting forth the correspondence with Taylor and the facts as above stated, and alleged that Taylor and Vicars were acting in concert in all that was' done. Vicars filed his affidavit traversing the charges of fraud; but as Taylor was the principal actor we will confine our observations upon the facts relating to his activities.

Taylor filed his own affidavit in which he denied that he had ever received a letter from plaintiff’s attorneys requesting him to send them copies of the pleadings filed in the clerk’s office by the defendant, or that he had received a letter requesting him to notify plaintiff’s attorneys of the steps taken in the cases. This is rather a remarkable statement in view of the fact that Scott & Hamilton’s letter of May 2nd, to Taylor, enclosing the petitions, expressly requested Taylor, as clerk, to send them copies of the defendants’ pleadings, and to advise them when the cases would be set down for trial. That Taylor received the letter is conclusively shown by the fact that he received the petitions and filed them as requested. In his affidavit Taylor further stated that it has never been customary for the circuit court clerk of Pike county to notify non-resident practitioners of the progress of actions filed by them, and that he never agreed to furnish appellant’s attorneys with copies of defendants ’ pleadings.

Taylor entirely overlooks the fact, however, that he was clerk of the Pike circuit court; that the request for a copy of the pleadings was made upon him, as clerk; that the plaintiff was entitled to the copies under section 904 of the Kentucky Statutes, the same to be taxed as costs; and, that under section 1751 the clerk’s fees were not due and payable until two months after the services were rendered. Taylor did not and could not have refused to make the copies upon the ground that his fees were not paid; on the contrary he rests his refusal upon the ground that copies had not been requested and that he had not agreed to furnish them. But the record conclusively shows the request, and his duty is fixed by the statute. He cannot hide behind the . alleged shortcomings of his deputy, for whose acts,he is responsible. The law required Taylor to furnish the copies, and ordinary good faith required him either to [396]*396notify appellant’s attorneys of the progress of the case, or to notify them of his refusal to do so.

It is insisted, however, that in filing his motion, for a new trial in this action the plaintiff did not comply with the provisions' of the code upon that subject. The motion for a new trial was made after the expiration of the term at which the judgment was entered, and section 518 of. the code confers upon the court the power, after the expiration of the term, to vacate or modify a judgment and grant a new trial for the causes herein relied upon. But section 520 of the code further provides that the proceedings in such cases, shall be by a verified petition, setting forth the judgment, the grounds to vacate it, and the defense to the action if the party applying was defendant; and that the proceedings on the petition shall be the same as those in the case in which the judgment was rendered.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 1160, 178 Ky. 392, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffers-v-taylor-kyctapp-1917.