Nolty v. Fultz

125 S.W.2d 749, 277 Ky. 49, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 566
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 6, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 749 (Nolty v. Fultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nolty v. Fultz, 125 S.W.2d 749, 277 Ky. 49, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 566 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This is the second appeal of this case, prosecuted from a judgment of the Carter circuit court rendered against the administrator of Wm. Nolty, Sr., upon a retrial of an action brought by him against the appellee to recover property alleged belonging to the intestate’s estate and in which it was further alleged that the appellee had fraudulently converted and was wrongfully using and withholding its possession from the administrator.

The factual situation, pleadings and issues based thereon, which are in the main the same as here, will be found clearly stated in the opinion delivered upon the first appeal, reported in 261 Ky. 516, 88 S. W. (2d) 35, and need not here be reiterated further than to observe, by way of presenting briefly the factual situation out of which the action arose, that it is therein stated that *51 Wm. Nolty died on January 31, 1933, in his seventy-ninth year, unmarried, intestate and without issue, when his estate, under the statute of descent, passed to his three sisters surviving him and to the children (among whom was the appellant), per stirpes, of his deceased brother, Henry Nolty.

It appears that on January 1, 1933, one of the deceased’s neighbors found the aged Wm. Nolty in his cabin seriously ill and at his request took him to the home of his niece, the appellee, in Carter county, where he remained under her care and nursing until .his death.

The relatives of deceased believed him to be very wealthy and frequently inquired of appellee, who took possssion of and claimed everything her deceased old uncle had, as to what estate he had left them, to which she answered that he did not “leave,” or leave them, anything.

In the belief that the inheritance rights of the other heirs were being wrongfully ignored, on September 25, 1933, Wm. Nolty, Jr., was appointed and qualified as administrator of the deceased Wm. Nolty’s estate, and on October 2 following filed suit in equity against Virginia Fultz, charging her with “having concealed and embezzled the old man’s money.”

This suit was in the nature of a bill of discovery, to which the administrator attached interrogatories addressed to appellee and her co-defendant, the First National Bank of G-rayson, Ky., in which it appears she had deposited the larger part of the old man’s money which had come into her possession and been retained by her as donee.

The appellee, in answer to the interrogatories propounded to her, asserted that, on the day he came to her home, the old man gave her $4,050, which she has since had, and in her answers to said interrogatories, she did not confine herself to simply responding to the questions propounded, but. went far afield and gave answers and detailed happenings, conversations, and occurrences had with the deceased, William Nolty, concerning which she was not ordinarily a competent witness.

The case was heard by the jury, which returned a verdict for the defendant.

Upon appeal therefrom, we reversed the judgment and granted a new trial, saying:

*52 “Since she [appellee] had admitted in her answer the receipt of this money from the old man, the burden was on Mrs. Fultz to account for the retention of it; * * *. She did not offer to take the stand herself, but offered, and over the objection and exceptions of the plaintiff, was allowed by the court to read to the jury the interrogatories that had been propounded to her and her answers to them. The administrator had on that day filed a written motion to strike, from the answers made by Mrs. Fultz to the interrogatories, those parts which he contended were not responsive to them because they violated section 606 (2) of the Civil Code of Practice, as she was testifying for herself concerning a transaction and conversation with the plaintiff’s intestate. The court overruled this motion, and the administrator excepted. * * *
“For Mrs. Fultz it is contended that, by virtue of the provisions of sections 140 and 141 of the Civil Code of Practice, she was not required to confine her answers to merely responding to the interrogatories, but that she had the right to state any fact she saw fit, and that she had a right to read these as a deposition.” 88 S. W. (2d) 36.

In disposing of this contention, it is observed in the opinion that:

“This action was originally brought in equity, but on March 3, 1934, it was by agreement transferred to the ordinary docket, and it was on the ordinary docket at the time of the trial, hence the answers could only be read under those same circumstances that a deposition of Mrs. Fultz could be read. Those circumstances are set out in sections 554 and 608 of the Civil Code of Practice which have been interpreted to mean that a deposition of a witness who is present at the trial of a common-law action cannot be read as substantive evidence.”

Further it was therein held that this cause having been transferred by agreement to the ordinary docket and tried as a common-law action, when Mrs. Fultz was present and in the courtroom, the court erred in permitting her to read in her own behalf her answers made to the interrogatories, as her deposition; further that “when plaintiff propounded the questions he did to Mrs. Fultz, he thereby waived her incompetency as a *53 witness and made her competent to testify about any matters concerning- which he had interrogated her, but no further;’-’ that “other fields not opened by the plaintiff remain closed as before, but as to any field of inquiry which plaintiff opened by his interrogation to her, she is a competent witness as to anything in that field, but not as to anything outside that field;” and further held that while Mrs. Fultz might testify, she had to do so in person and could not read her answers as given to these interrogatories. It was then adjudged that because of Mrs. Fultz having been erroneously permitted by the trial court to read her answers made to the interrogatories, instead of taking the stand herself, the judgment should be reversed and a new trial awarded.

Upon the second trial of the case, the appellee, Mrs. Fultz, consistently with the instructions given upon the first appeal, was called to the stand and permitted to testify as a competent witness concerning the matters about which the appellant had by his interrogatories questioned her.

By the fifth of these interrogatories, the appellee was asked:

“Did he (¥m. Nolty, Sr.) bring any money and/or other property with him when he came to your home? If he did, please state what became of said property, if you know.5'’

We are of the opinion that when plaintiff propounded this broad question to Mrs. Fultz, .he thereby, as held on the former appeal, waived her incompetency (Section 141, Civil Code of Practice) as a witness and made her competent to testify about the matter interrogated, even though in answering the interrogation she' was testifying for herself concerning a transaction and conversation had with her intestate kinsman and alleged donor.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 749, 277 Ky. 49, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nolty-v-fultz-kyctapphigh-1938.