Case Name: Clark County Nat. Bank v. Rowan County Board of Education et al.
Court: Kentucky Court of Appeals
Jurisdiction: Kentucky
Decision Date: 1935-11-19
Citations: 262 Ky. 153
Docket Number: 
Parties: Clark County Nat. Bank v. Rowan County Board of Education et al.
Judges: Whole court sitting.
Reporter: Kentucky Reports
Volume: 262
Pages: 153–157

Head Matter:
Clark County Nat. Bank v. Rowan County Board of Education et al.
(Decided Nov. 19, 1935.)
D. L. PENDLETON and W. B. WHITE for appellant.
W. E. PROCTOR and JAMES CLAY for appellees.

Opinion:
Opinion op the Court by
Stanley, Commissioner—
Reversing.
The petition of the appellant sought a mandamus to compel members of the Rowan County board of education to pay or provide for the payment of a judgment for $8,000, with interest and costs, rendered against it in favor of the plaintiff. The petition discloses that the case in which the judgment was rendered had been submitted by agreement] iand tried on its merits, and .judgment rendered .December 30, 1933, by Judge Prewitt, the regular judge. This was in vacation and the trial was under the provisions of section; 964b-l et seq., of the Statutes (1933 Supp.). At the succeeding regular March, 1934, term, an order was entered reciting that at the first rule day that followed the entry of. that judgment, motion and grounds for! a new trial had been filed, and also that a motion had been made to set aside and vacate the judgment; that the court (Judge Caudill presiding) sustained the same and set it aside, and the defendant was granted leave to amend its answer and take further testimony. It is averred in the petiton that the judgment of December 30 was final, and the succeeding order setting it aside is void. In this mandamus case Judge Caudill declined .to sit because he was interested in a similar case. Judge Newell, of the Nineteenth judicial district, having been designated as a .special judge, overruled the demurrer to the petition, thereby holding the judgment of December 30 to be final, and the order setting it aside as having no effect.. Subsequently an answer was filed which, among other defenses, affirmatively set up the validity of the order of March 21, 1934. Hon. J. B. Hannah, having been designated as a special judge to hear the-case; carried the demurrer to the answer back to the petition and .sustained it, thereby reversing the ruling of Judge Newell. The plaintiff, declining to plead further, suffered the -dismissal of its mandamus -suit, and brings appeal.
Hence there is presented the construction -of -section 964b-l of the Statutes authorizing circuit courts, other than those of continuous -session, to make or direct in. vacation or term time any rule, judgment, or decree in any proceeding upon reasonable notice, to the parties,, except where a jury is required. The specific question is whether or not a judgment entered pursuant thereto may be vacated during the subsequent regular term of court.
The statute is indefinite, since it does not -specify any time in which a motion for a new trial may thereafter be made. The court was first of the opinion that, the common-law rule giving a reasonable time in which-, to do so should be regarded, and held in Center's Guardian v. Center, 244 Ky. 502, 51 S. W. (2d) 460, that a. judgment entered under the act was subject to the-control of the -court at the next succeeding regular-term. However, upon a reconsideration of the statute-in Estes v. Woodford, 246 Ky. 485, 55 S. W. (2d) 396, 397, we held that it should be read in connection with all other statutes relating to practice and procedure,, and that the effect of acting under its provisions was-to hold a special term of court. It was expressly held that the Code provisions as to the time for filing a, motion and grounds for a new trial and the granting or refusing a new trial should be observed. The, argument, that -a court sitting under the terms of this act for only-a day deprives the litigant of the three days allowed-by the Code is met by pointing out that the same condition exists when a judgment is entered on the last; day of a regular or ordinary special term. As stated in the Estes opinion, "if necessary, required, or proper,. in the sound discretion of the court or the judge sitting, the court should make such adequate orders as the needs of the case authorize and justify." So the court may allow time in which to file the motion and grounds for a new trial beyond the day on which judgment is rendered.
Under the view that the sitting of the court is equivalent to a special term, all procedural difficulties disappear, and the beneficent effect in expediting and determining causes, which it was the purpose of the act to do, is enjoyed. Otherwise a judgment, though having the effect of disposing of the litigation, would be interlocutory and remain such until the close of the succeeding regular term of court, which in some instances would be ¡several months afterward. We, therefore, adhere to the construction given in Estes v. Woodford, supra, and overrule Center's Guardian v. Center, supra, in so far as it is in conflict.
We may observe that the Virginia Code, sec. 6308 (formerly section 3427), is in general the same as our statute under consideration except that the submission of a cause must be by consent. It is ¡similar in that it provides that "such orders and judgments entered in vacation shall have the same force and effect as if made and entered in term," and in that it makes no provisions as to time in which a reconsideration or new trial should be asked. The statute was construed in Matney v. Yates, 121 Va. 506, 93 S. E. 694, and Appalachia v. Mainous, 126 Va. 419, 101 S. E. 359, 360. It was held in the latter case that a motion made two months after the rendition of a judgment entered under the statute came too late, even though time had been given in which to file a bill of exceptions for appeal, the court saying:
"It did not authorize any other or further objections to be made at any subsequent time. The judgment, when entered, was a final judgment, and the judge of the trial court had no further power over it. He could not hear any further motions in it, nor amend or alter the judgment. His jurisdiction ¡over the cause was exhausted. The case stood on the same footing as a judgment rendered in term would stand after the adjournment of the court. A judgment at law entered in vacation stands on the same footing as a final decree entered in a suit in chancery in vacation. Section 3427 of the Code (1904) applies alike to both in this respect."
In the former opinion it was held that a decree entered under the, provisions of the statute was final, and that another statute giving the court "control over all proceedings in the office during the preceding vacation" had no application.
It follows, therefore,, that the court was in error in sustaining the demurrer to the petition and in holding the judgment of December 30, 1933, to have been vacated.
Judgment reversed.
Whole court sitting.