Stewart v. Model Coal Company

288 S.W. 696, 216 Ky. 742, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1003
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 26, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 696 (Stewart v. Model Coal Company) 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
Stewart v. Model Coal Company, 288 S.W. 696, 216 Ky. 742, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1003 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Granting’ relief.

In the year 1923 the petitioner herein, Fred Stewart,, was in the employ of the respondent, Model Coal Company. Claiming to have received an injury in an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment, he-instituted proceedings against the respondent before the Workmen’s Compensation Board to have his claim for compensation adjudicated. The respondent put in issue the happening of the alleged accident, the alleged consequent injuries, and, further, the extent of its liability if it was liable at all. It seems that prior to the alleged accident, the petitioner had lost the sight of one of his eyes. He claimed that the accident had caused him to-lose the sight of the other eye. As the case of Combs v. Hazard Blue Grass Coal Corporation, 207 Ky. 242, 26S. W. 1070, in which we held under a similar state of' facts that the employee was entitled to -compensation for total disability, subject to a deduction of the amount which would have been allowable for the loss of the first eye, had not then been decided, the question whether this- *745 was the rule or whether the employee was entitled to compensation for the loss of one eye only was then an open one in this state, and the petitioner and the respondent were at issue as to which was the correct rule to •apply if the petitioner was entitled to any compensation. The board held that the petitioner had been injured in an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment; that he had thereby lost the sight of his remaining eye and that the rule subsequently laid down in the Combs case, supra, should be applied. Judgment was accordingly entered for petitioner in the sum of $6,000.00 credited by the sum of $1,200.00, making a net award of •$4,800.00, to be payable in weekly installments as the statute provides. The Model Coaí Company prosecuted .an appeal to the Harlan circuit court, where the award was affirmed, from which judgment an appeal to this court was granted the respondent. Pending the appeal to the circuit court a number of installments of the board’s award had accrued but had not been paid. On .motion, the Harlan circuit court ordered the respondent to continue the payment of the installments pending the .appeal from its judgment to this court. In December, 1923, there being then due about $950.00 back installments under the board’s award, the petitioner and respondent agreed that the respondent would pay the petitioner the sum of $1,000.00 and the petitioner would not seek to enforce by execution or otherwise the payment •of future installments of the award pending the appeal in this court. The respondent says that it was moved to make this agreement at this time because, even under its theory of the case, if it was liable at all, it at least owed the petitioner the sum of $1,200.00, and since it placed but little faith in its appeal except so far as the question •of its extent of liability was concerned, it thought that it was well within the coefficient of safety when it agreed to pay this $1,000.00. While the respondent was preparing its appeal to this court, it claims to have discovered that the petitioner was a paroled convict and that he had ■secured his parole prior to the accident of which he was •complaining from the State 'Board of 'Charities and Corrections of Kentucky, on the representation to.that board that he had lost the sight of one eye and that a disease was then causing him to lose the sight of the other eye. Deeming this information sufficient to establish the fact that the petitioner’s loss of the sight of the eye herein *746 complained of was due to a pre-existing disease, and not to tlae alleged accident, and that the award he had secur ed from the compensation board had been procured by fraud, the respondent declined to pay the $1,000.00 it had agreed to pay by the contract of December, 1923, and brought an action in the Harlan circuit court under section 518 of the Civil Code to set aside the judgment of that court affirming the award of the compensation board. A demurrer having been sustained to its petition and it having declined to plead further, its petition was dismissed and it .prosecuted an appeal in that case to this court. Such was the situation in the spring of 1924.

On August 14, 1924, there was paid to the attorneys-representing the petitioner in the litigation then pending the sum of $1,500.00, of which they retained the sum of $500.00 for attorneys’ fees, the balance being paid over to-the petitioner, who was present when the draft for $1,500.00 was turned over to his counsel and cashed by them. At the same time, the petitioner, who was totally blind, signed by mark a receipt and an order ££ dismissing settled” the appeal from the Harlan circuit court-affirming the award of the compensation board pending in this court. This order was later filed in this court and that appeal dismissed, the respondent at the same time dismissing without prejudice its other appeal from the-judgment of the Harlan circuit court dismissing its suit, brought to set aside the judgment affirming the award of the compensation board.

On November 6,1925, the petitioner filed in this court this proceeding to set aside the order heretofore entered ££dismissing settled” the respondent’s first appeal. From the pleadings in this proceeding it appears that the petitioner seeks this relief on the ground that the settlement and the order of dismissal filed in this court were procured by fraud, and that the settlement, however procured, had never been approved by the Workmen’s Compensation Board, for which reason such settlement and the order of dismissal were erroneous and void.

That this court has the power to set aside a judgment, rendered by it after the term at which it was rendered because procured by fraud, is clear to us. In 34 C. J. 278, it is said:

“The fact that a judgment was obtained through fraud or collusion is universally held to constitute a . sufficient reason for opening or vacating such judg *747 ment in a proper form of proceeding, either before or after the term at which it was rendered, court's of record possessing an inherent common law power in this behalf which is not dependent upon legislation, although in some states statutes expressly confer power to vacate judgments upon the ground of fraud and regulate, its exercise., ’ ’

Long prior to the adoption of our first Civil Code, it was the settled rule in this state that a judgment or decree obtained by fraud could be avoided by a bill in chancery. Williams v. Fowler, 2 J. J. Marsh. 405; Prewitt v. Singleton’s Exors. 3 J. J. Marsh 707; Edmondson v. Moseby’s Heirs, 4 J. J. Marsh. 497. This was in accord with the common law rule that judgments obtained by fraud should not be allowed to stand and could be set aside after the term at which they were rendered. Though these cases bear on the right to set aside judgments in a nisi prius court, the logic of the rule is equally applicable to an appellate court. Possessing inherent power then to set aside a judgment procured by fraud though at a former term of this court, which power has not been .abrogated by any statute of this state, we are clearly of the opiniin that the petitioner has the right to maintain this action. Compare section 518 of the Civil Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 696, 216 Ky. 742, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-model-coal-company-kyctapphigh-1926.