Rucker's Adm'r v. Roadway Express, Inc.

131 S.W.2d 840, 279 Ky. 707, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 26, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 131 S.W.2d 840 (Rucker's Adm'r v. Roadway Express, Inc.) 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
Rucker's Adm'r v. Roadway Express, Inc., 131 S.W.2d 840, 279 Ky. 707, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 328 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Fulton

Reversing.

On September 2, 1936, William Rucker was killed in a collision between two trucks in Rockcastle County. Tbe appellant, as bis administrator, filed suit in tbe Rockcastle Circuit Court on December 17, 1936, against tbe appellee, Roadway Express, Inc., for tbe alleged negligent killing of bis intestate. On application of appellee tbat action was removed to tbe Federal Court and in tbat court appellee filed motion to quash tbe summons and tbe return of tbe sheriff thereon for tbe reason tbat tbe summons should have been served upon its designated process agent. A copy of this motion to quash, showing tbe name of tbe process agent, was delivered to Robert B. Bird, attorney for tbe plaintiff. Tbe action was dismissed without prejudice at tbe May term, 1937, of tbe U. 8. District Court on motion of tbe plaintiff.

Tbe present action was filed against tbe same defendant in tbe Rockcastle Circuit Court on August 31, 1937. On tbat date summons was issued by the clerk directed to the sheriff of Jefferson County and delivered to Mr. Bird, who took it to bis office. It was never executed. On October 13, 1937, new process was issued, directed to tbe sheriff of Jefferson County, delivered to Mr. Bird and immediately executed.

By answer as amended, tbe. appellee pleaded tbe one-year statute of limitation, alleging tbat the filing of this action and issuance of process on August 31 was not in good faith because tbe process was not delivered to tbe sheriff for service.

Upon tbe calling of tbe case for trial, tbe court, pursuant to motion of appellee, beard evidence upon tbe plea of limitation and, after this evidence was beard, was of tbe opinion tbat tbe plea of limitation was well *709 taken and dismissed the petition. From the judgment dismissing this petition, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

Mr. Bird, in his testimony, accounts for his failure to forward the process issued on August 31 to the sheriff of Jefferson County in the following manner: He says he took it to his office, expecting to find there the name of appellee’s process agent in the copy of the motion above referred to made in the Federal Court, but could not find the motion; that he went to the office of Mr. Denny, one of defendant’s attorneys, two or three times, attempting to ascertain the name of this process agent, but Mr. Denny could not find it, but finally told him that he could probably find it in a certain suit which had been filed in court. The summons was placed by him in a basket on his desk. During the time he was investigating concerning the name of the process agent his wife became ill and it was necessary for him to take her to the hospital where she was confined for a period of about three weeks. During the time she was in the hospital he attended to no business in his office except to answer mail. When he got back to his office and settled down, he came to the clerk’s office again and made another effort to ascertain the name of the process agent, but was unable to do so. He conferred with Mr. Denny again, who gave him the name of a suit in which he could find the name of the process agent. He did not find the name in this suit, but did find it on the docket where the process in that suit had been copied. When he got back to the office he did not find the original summons as it had been misplaced. He thereupon had the new summons issued. Later on the stenographer in his office found the original summons in one of his father’s files, where it had become mixed up with some other papers. Mr. Denny corroborates the testimony of Mr. Bird to some extent by testifying that Mr. Bird talked to him three or four times concerning the name and address of the defendant’s process agent.

Section 2516, Kentucky Statutes, provides that an action for an injury to the person of the plaintiff shall be commenced within one year next after the cause of action accrued and not thereafter. Section 2524 of the Statutes provides:

“An action shall be deemed to have been commenced at the date of the first summons or process *710 issued in good faith from the court or tribunal having jurisdiction of the cause of action.”

The action was filed within one year after plaintiff’s cause of action accrued and summons was issued. Thus we have presented for decision the question whether the summons was issued in good faith. In short, did the retention of the summons by plaintiff’s attorney for a period of six weeks under the circumstances shown in evidence establish that the summons was not issued in good faith?

In Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company v. Litlte, 264 Ky. 579, 95 S. W. (2d) 253, 255, the one-year limitation expired on February 3. Action was filed on January 15, and summons issued and delivered to plaintiff’s attorney, who placed it in his office file and did not deliver it to the sheriff for forty-three days thereafter. This attorney merely said that the matter was overlooked, but the plaintiff’s father, who was looking after the litigation for him, stated that he had advised the attorneys that he wanted to get the summons executed on Maxwell (a joint defendant with the railroad company) before it was served on the company. The summons, when finally executed on March 10, was executed both on Maxwell and the railroad company. It was held under these circumstances that the plaintiff’s action was barred by limitation. We are in thorough accord with this holding. An able and exhaustive review of the authorities having any reasonable bearing on this question was undertaken in the opinion, and, for that reason, it is not necessary to do so again here. The court in that case said:

“The taking out of summons is presumptive evidence of an intention to have it served in due course, but that presumption may be rebutted by the facts. It may have been issued to be used or not, as circumstances thereafter required. Service may have been intentionally withheld by direction of the plaintiff until the occurrence of an event upon which his decision as to effecting the process depended. In other words, causing a summons to be issued by the clerk conditionally is not causing it to be issued in good faith. An intention to postpone starting the litigation is thereby evidenced. All the authorities are to the effect that the cause of action is not commenced until there is a bona fide intention to have *711 the summons filled out and signed by the clerk, accompanied by bona fide, unequivocal intention to have it served or proceeded on presently or in due course or without abandonment. Action and intention combined constitutes the commencement of the suit, because a summons filled out and signed with no intention of having it served is altogether inoperative. ’ ’

In line with the above quoted language, the taking out of the summons in the case at bar was presumptive evidence of an intention to have it served in due course. There is no pretense in this case that there was any withholding of the summons until the occurrence of an event upon which the plaintiff’s decision as to effecting service of the process depended as in the Little case. In that case plaintiff had in mind that the summons was not to be served on the railroad company until service could be secured on the other defendant. This might never have happened.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.2d 840, 279 Ky. 707, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruckers-admr-v-roadway-express-inc-kyctapphigh-1939.