Case Name: Black, &c. vs. Lackey
Court: Kentucky Court of Appeals
Jurisdiction: Kentucky
Decision Date: 1842-04-14
Citations: 2 B. Mon 257
Docket Number: 
Parties: Black, &c. vs Lackey.
Judges: 
Reporter: Kentucky Reports
Volume: 41
Pages: 257–258

Head Matter:
Black, &c. vs Lackey.
Pet. & ’Sum,
Error to the Estile Circuit.
Case 80.
Petition and summons. Abatement.
April 14.
It is a sufficient compliance with the statute requiring notes on which suit is brought by petition and summons to be filed, that the note is on file in another suit in the same Court.
The pendency ot a suit in chancery for attaching and enforcing a lien, is no cause for abating tí tí suit at law on note for the same debt.

Opinion:
jvdoe Marshall
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
It seems to this Court that the fact that the notes on which the petition is brought were on file in the same Court, in a suit in chancery, pending between the .same parties, when the petition was filed, and that they so remained up to the time of pleading, was a virtual compliance with the requisition of the statute in regard to the filing of the note, substantially answering all the objects of that requisition, as set forth in the opinion of this Court in the case of Gearhart vs Olmstead, fyc. (7 Dana, 442,) and that under such circumstances there was no ground for abating the suit or quashing the summons, on account of the fact that the notes were not literally filed in the same paper with the petition.
We are also of opinion that the pendency of the -chancery suit, for attaching and enforcing a lien for the same debt, was not a ground for abating this suit at law. The two suits were brought for different purposes, and were not commensurate in their objects. The chancery suit could afford no relief beyond the effects sought to be attached, and the creditor should not, thereby, be deprived of the right of obtaining a personal judgment for the debt, which might be essential to its security and ultimate satisfaction. The Chancellor could and would prevent any oppressive use of either remedy. Whether the creditor might not have been compelled, in one Court or the other, to make his election upon a rule or motion to that end, need not be decided.
Owsley fy Goodloe for appellants; Turner for appellee.
There being no §nor in overruling the defendants demurrers to the replications presenting the foregoing facts in answer to the pleas in abatement, nor in overruling the motion to quash the summons, the judgment is affirmed.