Scott & Coffy v. Cook

20 Ky. 280, 4 T.B. Mon. 280, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 5, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Ky. 280 (Scott & Coffy v. Cook) 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
Scott & Coffy v. Cook, 20 Ky. 280, 4 T.B. Mon. 280, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 15 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Chief Justice Bibb

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

At July term, 1819, Scott and Coffy exhibited their bill against nos Cook, and the assignees of a note given to Cook, by the complainants, for $320, to be relieved against a judgment at law, obtained by the last assignee.

The ground of relief charged in the bill is, that is note of $32Q, with another of $100,) were executed to Cook, in consideration of Cook’s covenant (with Wm. Hereford as his surety) to deliver to the complainants, on Cumberland river, a boat 50 feet long and 15 feet wide, by the 25th February, 1818, and two hundred barrels of corn on the Cumberland bottom, convenient to said boat, at a place designated therein, for the delivery of the boat and corn.

That afterwards, in satisfaction of Cook’s covenant, then broken, they received from Cook two hundred barrels of corn, and an assignment of Knos Barnes’ covenant to Cook, to deliver him a like boat and one hundred barrels of corn, at reasonable gathering time, in consideration of $245, to be paid by Cook.

This covenant bears date 14th October, 1817, and was assigned by Cook, on the 26th of February, 1818, to the complainants.

That at the time of the assignment, Cook assured them that the whole of Barnes’ covenant was unperformed and undischarged, when in truth it had been performed to Cook himself, which Cook fraudulently concealed, and that Cook is insolvent.

That the boat was worth one hundred and fifty dollars, and the corn one hundred and fifty dollars.

For this sum of $300 an injunction was obtained.

Answer of Stone and Oats. Cook’s Answer. Pinkston’s answer. Continuances. Special order of continuance, that the complainant should be ready for trial at next term, without further indulgence. Complainants except to answers. Hearing without attention to the exceptions to the answers, and without objection to the depositions.

[281]*281On the 26th October, 1819, James Stone and Joshua Oats. two of the assignees, filed their answers in Court, denying all knowledge of the equitable circumstances alleged in the bill.

On the fourth day of the same term, 28th October, fold, Cook filed his answer; in which be denies that be represented the corn and boat an both due from Romeo, but on the contract that the corn bad boon delivered by Ramos, and was a part of the two hundred barrels which in complainants had receive, that the complainants; were to informed at the time of the alignment, and that the covenant of Frances for the heat only, in payment for the like best which Cook owed complainants, was assigned and so stated and declared at the time of the assignment.

He denies his own insolvency, denies that Barnes ever delivered the boat to him, and if Barnes failed to satisfy (be complainants, it was their own fault, that they had not received satisfaction by compulsory means, Barnes being solvent.

At the same term, October 1810, Pinkston filed his answer denying any knowledge of tne equitable circumstances alleged in the bill.

Until October term 1820, the cause was continued; at this term the cause, was continued on the motion of the complainants, and for cause shown.

At the April term, 1821, the complainants again obtained a continuance uni ii the next July term, under the special order in be prepared for trial at that term, without further indulgence.

At that term, (July 1821.) end on the third day of the term, (tie complainants filed exceptions to the answers of all has Cook, because (hey did not respond to the allegation of Cook’s insolvency.

At the October term 1812 the case was continued by connect of parties — and from term to term, without any special movement in the case, it was continued until the April term, 1823, when it was heard, without any attention to the exceptions to the [282]*282answers, and Without any appearance of exceptions to the reading of the depositions.

Decree dismissing complainants bill. Exceptions filed to answers must be called up and insisted on. Exceptions to depositions in the circuit court.

The court held the case under advisement, unfit term 1823, When the bill was dismissed with costs: from which the complainants have appealed.

The counsel for complainants now object that the exceptions to the answers were not disposed of by the circuit court. To this objection the answer is that the complainants never brought those excep-tions up for argument or decision. He filed them and abandoned them by doing nothing with them or touching them. He proceeded term after Let in, from July term 1821. fill April 1823, as if upon replication filed, and as upon a case standing for hearing. The statute, which disperres with the necessity of a replication, and makes the. ease stand for trial at the next term after answer filed, and which dispenses with the rules in the office, and requires all rules and proceedings to be taken in court, has .so far innovated upon the ancient usage and practice in chancery, as to leave, the courts in many instances without any certain guide in .matters of practice. But we. cannot indulge a practice of filing exceptions and never insisting on them in the court below,- nor asking in any way the decision of the court upon them; and after such quiescence, permit the party to insist upon the exceptions here, as an error of the in court below in not disposing of the exceptions in some way. All that the, party has aright to claim in such case is, to apply the usual rule, in cases of allegations not confessed nor denied by answer, as upon replication by complain ants.

The counsel for complainants likewise, moves exceptions to depositions, tor want of notice., and because the notice's were not served in time, am! because the depositions taken on behalf of the defendants, were of witnesses who had been previously examined on ihv. part of the defendants, and no order had been obtained for re-examining these witnesses.

[283]*283The depositions alluded to by the complainant, and intended to be excluded, are of

James Conn, taken on the 10th of June, 1822,

Josiah Barnes, taken at the same time.

Martin Conn, taken at the same time.

The exceptions alluded to, were endorsed upon the depositions in the clerk’s office, on the 9th July, 1822, and signed by the attorney for the complainants.

But from that time, and at the hearing, nothing was done upon those exceptions. There is nothing in the record to shew that these exceptions were ever insisted on; no notice of them before the court, at any time appears, nor is there arty decision of the court asked. They were read, it. seems, and so the objection now made admits, and it is alleged that the court erred in permitting them to be read with* out disposing of the exceptions.

Exceptions so endorsed upon the depositions taken on the part of the complainants, were filed by the defendants in the clerk’s office, bearing date ora the 23d April, 1821, to the depositions of

Wm. Barnes, Sen,, taken 20th April, 1821,

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ky. 280, 4 T.B. Mon. 280, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-coffy-v-cook-kyctapp-1827.