Taylor v. Bank of Kentucky

25 Ky. 564, 2 J.J. Marsh. 564, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 156
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 2, 1829
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Ky. 564 (Taylor v. Bank of Kentucky) 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
Taylor v. Bank of Kentucky, 25 Ky. 564, 2 J.J. Marsh. 564, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 156 (Ky. Ct. App. 1829).

Opinion

Judge Robertson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was once before in this court, and is reported in I. Monroe, 171.

At the June term, 1825, of the circuit court, whose decision had been reversed by this court, a document, purporting to be the opinion and mandate of the court of appeals, as reported in I. Monroe, certified by F. P, Blair as clerk of that court, was produced and entered on the record; and thereupon, the case, by order of the court, was re-decketted and continued. To all this no objection seems to have been made. At the subsequent September term of the court, the defendants appeared, and, by consent, the cause was continued at their cost.

At the next term, the defendants moved for a continuance, which being denied, they excepted, and seemed to rely on the ground that they could not be [565]*565torced into a trial until the opinion of this court should be certified by its constitutional clerk. .

They also, at the same term, moved the court rescind the order admitting the copy of the opinion, and reinstating the cause on the docket. This motion was also overruled, and the defendants excepted.

A verdict being rendered for the plaintiffs, the court set it aside, and awarded a new trial, the verdict being for a less sum than the court considered the plaintiffs entitled to recover, by the proof.

At a subsequent term, the defendant, Taylor, (all the other defendants having died,) filed a plea, averring that the defalcations of the cashier, Pendleton, were “known to” and “connived at as they occurred,” by the president and directors of the branch bank at Bardstown. On the filing of this plea, the court continued the cause at the defendant’s cost. To this ho excepted.

At the next term a demurrer to this plea, was sustained by the court; and the case was .tried on the issues which had been made up before this court decided it. The court having refused to the defendant a new trial, he appealed to this court.

Various errors are assigned, the principal of which question the decision on the motion to rescind the order, or to continue the case; and that rendered on the demurrer to the plea: most of. the others are virtually disposed of by the former opinion of this court.

Before the first trial after the return of the cause to the circuit court, the defendants offered a plea, alleging performance of his covenant by Pendleton, and that, since the execution of the bond sued on, he had executed another bond with other, securities, which had been accepted by the bank. The filing of this plea being opposed, the court refused to permit it to be filed.

The latter branch of the plea was certainly insufficient. See the former opinion. The first part of the plea might, alone, have been good. But no reason [566]*566is shown for filing it so long after the issues had been made up, and the court, without some satisfactory reason, which does not appear, would have erred if it had suffered a simple plea of covenants performed^ to be filed at the time this plea was offered.

Oyer once, is all that party can require in same suit.

The defendants, at the same time, demanded oyer of the bond, which was refused, because oyer had' been given on the former trial. There was no error in this; oyer once, is all that can be required by a party, in the same suit. If oyer had been properly demanded on the former trial, either the original bond was on file, or a copy of it was in the record. If, on oyer, it had been read, oyer could not be demanded again.

The usual mode of authenticating the opinions and mandates of this court, is by the official certificate of its clerk., F. P, Blair was not its clerk. He obtained the possession of this and other documents and records of the court, and forcibly withheld them from Sneed, who was the clerk. Blair was recognized by a portion of the sovereign power, as the clerk. He claimed to be clerk, and had the semblance of authority. But his appointment was made without constitutional power to make it, and therefore, as has been declared by this court, was void, and conferred no right on him. No court or individual was bound to regard his acts or certificates as valid. But whether, if a court should choose to accredit his authentications, without opposition or objection, this court would be authorized to control its decisions, and-reverse, for that cause alone, is quite another and' very different question. Blair did not claim to be clerk of the constitutional court of appeals. He was-not recognized as its clerk. Bu t as he had the records, of the court, and no other could, without his leave, take copies from them, we could not say that a circuit court might not rightfully, give credence, “pro hac vice,” to his certified copies, if their genuineness were not questioned by either party.

But be this as it may, an official certificate being necessary, only as evidence to assure the court that the copy certified, is a true copy; if an opinion of this qourt be presented to the inferior court, without [567]*567any authentication, and no objection be made to its want of authentication, although it would be rash and irregular to receive and act upon it, as an authoritative mandate, yet if the court do so, its final judgment ought not to be reversed, for that cause alone, unless it should appear that this court rrendered no such opinion, or the copy had been objected to for want of authentication.

In this case, the defendants being parties in this court, knew whether an opinion had been given, and what that opinion was. When the paper, certified by Blair as the opinion, was exhibited, they knew whether it was genuine, or had been truly transcribed. No objection being made to it, is a tacit admission of its genuineness. If this court gave such an opinion, the circuit court, on ascertaining that fact, might proceed with the cause again. The mode of ascertaining the fact, is not so important as the fact itself. It is prudent, to observe the safe and usual mode. But it would not be denied that a circuit court might, very properly, receive and obey a sworn copy of a mandate of this court; that is, a transcript taken by a private individual, and verified by his oath. If, without any certificate from Blair, the defendants below had admitted that the copy offered and received, in this case, was a true copy, there would have been no necessity for any further proof of it. We consider their conduct as a virtual admission in this case. They made no objection until at the second term after the opinion was entered and the cause reinstated; and even then, they did not intimate, that the opinion which had been received, was not precisely that which had been rendered by this court, or that there had been any other. They objected, only to the authentication. It was too late to object to the admissibility of the evidence, for certifying the opinion, after that evidence had been received, not only without their objection, but apparently, with their perfect acquiescence and concurrence.

If they had insisted and proposed to show that no such opinion had ever been given, it was not too late to do so. The court still had control over its preparatory and interlocutory orders, and this copy being [568]*568the only authority of the court, it had a right, at anytime before final1 judgment, to refuse to proceed, if it had any reason to doubt the authority.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ky. 564, 2 J.J. Marsh. 564, 1829 Ky. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-bank-of-kentucky-kyctapp-1829.