Petrey v. Holliday

199 S.W. 67, 178 Ky. 410, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 768
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 18, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 67 (Petrey v. Holliday) 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
Petrey v. Holliday, 199 S.W. 67, 178 Ky. 410, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 768 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Carroll

Sustaining motion to dissolve injunction.

On September 4, 1917, P. Gr. Petrey, as trustee, and the Lotts Creek Coal Co. filed tbeir petition in equity against S. B. Holliday and several other defendants, setting up, in substance, that Petrey, as trustee, was the owner in fee of all the coal, iron, gas and other mineral substances in a described boundary of land, with the right to use the timber standing on the land; that Petrey had leased his right, title and interest in the coal in the land to the Lotts Creek Coal Co., with the right to go upon the land, use certain timber thereon, and build tipples, tramways, warehouses, shops, houses and other buildings necessary for the mining and removing of the coal; that Holliday and the other defendants were giving it out to the great injury of the plaintiffs., that the [412]*412plaintiffs were not the owners of the coal, gas or other-mineral products in the land, nor did they have the right to use the timber thereon or to put on the land any tipples, shops, buildings,, roads or other equipment necessary to develop it; that the defendants, in furtherance of their claim of ownership to the land and the mineral interest therein, had let to the Southern Construction Co. the right to build certain houses on the land that would injuriously interfere with the rights of the plaintiffs.

On the averments of the petition they asked for judgment, holding that Petrey, as trustee, was the owner of the mineral interests in the land, with the right to do the things he claimed the right to do in his petition; and they also asked for an injunction restraining the defendants, Holliday and. others, from doing the things it was asserted in the petition they were about to do.

This petition, which was verified, further set out 'that no injunction had been granted or refused by the court or any circuit judge, and that the regular circuit judge' of the district was then absent from Perry county and the district. .

Upon filing the petition in the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Perry county, the plaintiffs moved the circuit clerk, without notice to the defendants, to issue a temporary order of injunction restraining the defendants from doing the things which the petition asked they be enjoined from doing; and thereupon the clerk did, on September 4th, issue such an injunction as was requested.

Thereafter, on September 29, 1917, the defendants, upon notice1 and showing that the regular judge of the circuit court, embracing the district in which Perry county was situated, was absent from the county and the district, made a motion before Judge Adams, circuit judge of another, adjoining district, to dissolve the temporary restraining order granted by the clerk of the Perry circuit court. Upon hearing this motion, Judge Adams, in the following order, dissolved the restraining order:

“This action came before the undersigned, as judge of the Twenty-third Judicial District, upon motion of the defendants to dissolve the temporary restraining order granted herein by W. C. Combs, clerk of the Perry circuit court, without notice, on the fourth day of September, 1917. And came the defendants and filed notice of the said motion, duly executed on the plaintiffs, and also [413]*413the affidavit of Tolbert Holliday, showing the absence of the Hon. John C. Eversole from the. Twenty-third Judicial District at this time, and since the suing out of the said restraining order, and also a stipulation of the parties by their attorneys showing that office copies of the pleadings and restraining order might be read on the trial of this motion. And thereupon came the plaintiffs by their attorneys and moved the undersigned judge at the same time to grant them an order of injunction herein until the further orders of the Perry circuit court, in accordance with the prayer of the petition, and produced and read to the court the affidavits of E. M. Den-ham, C. M. Davis, A. S. Petrey and J. B. Eversole, with maps attached and also read the original deed from E. C. Holliday and wife to R. C. Reams, trustee, dated March 25, 1910, and the original deed from R. C. Reams, trustee, to P. Gr. Petrey, trustee, dated May 31,1917, and the original lease from P. Gr. Petrey, trustee, to the Lotts Oreek Coal Co., and closed in chief.
“Thereupon the defendants offered to produce their evidence orally, to which the plaintiff objected, and their objections being overruled, the defendants were allowed to testify orally, and the court heard the evidence of Tolbert Holliday, E. C. Holliday, Schyler Vermillion and 8. B. Holliday, and the evidence of A. 8. Petrey and J. B. Eversole, in rebuttal,. and' said motions were then submitted.
“The judge is of the opinion and so decides that the temporary restraining order granted by the clerk was prematurely issued, and that the same be now set aside and held for naught, and the motion of the plaintiffs for an injunction is overruled, to all of which the plaintiffs except. ’ ’

On September 28th, the defendants filed in the clerk’s office their answer and counterclaim putting in issue all the averments of the petition and setting up their right, title and interest in and to the land and minerals therein, and on October 22nd the plaintiffs filed in the clerk’s office their reply.

After this, on October 27’, 1917, the plaintiffs, pursuant to a notice previously given, appeared before Judge John C. Eversole, circuit judge of the district including Perry county, in the .court house at Hazard, Ky., and moved Judge Eversole, not sitting as the court, but as a circuit .judge in vacation, to gránt an injunction similar to the one that had been issued by the clerk of the Perry circuit court and dissolved by Judge Adams. [414]*414When this motion was made, the defendants, Holliday and others, entered a motion before Judge Eversole that he vacate the bench and decline to hear or dispose of the motion then pending before him to grant an injunction, and in support of this motion they filed before and. with Judge Eversole the affidavit of one of the defendants, setting out that John B. Eversole, a nephew by blood of Judge Eversole, was a large stockholder of the-plaintiff, Lotts Creek Coal Co., a corporation, and in-addition to the interest he owned in this corporation, and his other connections therewith, one P. Gr. Petrey, as trustee, held the legal title to all the coal and mineral in the land in controversy for the beneficiaries named in the trust deed, one of whom was John B. Eversole, who was the owner of a large and valuable interest, amounting to not less than one-sixth nor more than one-fourth of the coal and mineral on the land in controversy independent of his connection with the Lotts Creek Coal Co.; that “because of the relationship of John B. Eversole to the said circuit judge, as hereinbefore set out, it would place the said circuit judge, as well as the litigants in this action, in an embarrassing position if he should try or attempt to try this cause, and because of said relationship and the interests of the said John B. Eversole, as hereinbefore set out, the said circuit judge, as affiant believes, and, therefore, charges, could not and.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Abbott, Inc. v. Samuel Guirguis
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2021
Black v. State
187 So. 2d 815 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1966)
Hill v. Kesselring
220 S.W.2d 858 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1949)
Johnson v. Commonwealth
203 S.W.2d 12 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1947)
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Cooper v. Howard
102 S.W.2d 18 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1937)
Ledford v. Hubbard
33 S.W.2d 345 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
Hobbs Bros. Drilling Company v. Cooper
32 S.W.2d 542 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
Allen, Comlth's Atty. v. Bach, District Judge
26 S.W.2d 43 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
Bradley v. Commonwealth
291 S.W. 1047 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)
Lewis v. Petrey
288 S.W. 755 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1926)
Porter v. Moore
252 S.W. 97 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1923)
Combs v. Commonwealth
246 S.W. 132 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 67, 178 Ky. 410, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petrey-v-holliday-kyctapp-1917.