Court Opinion

ID: 7137373
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:25:23.478173+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:40.701494
License: Public Domain

Opinion op the court by
Judge Carroll
— Reversing.
Eogers sued Hatton in the Estill Circuit Court upon a note for less than $50. Some two months afterwards he filed an affidavit and obtained an attachment against the property of Hatton, which was levied upon the land owned by him. Afterwards a judgment by default was rendered for the amount of the debt, the attachment sustained, and an order entered directing a sale of the attached land. Thereupon Hat-ton came into court, and moved the court to vacate the judgment as void, upon the ground that he was not before the court when it was rendered.
There are several errors in the record before us, among which we may mention the fact that no attachment bond was executed; but the only one that we need particularly notice is the question whether or not Hatton was before the court. If he was not, the judgment was void, and his motion to vacate it should have been sustained. Although the note sued on was for less than $50, the fact that an attachment was obtained and levied upon land gave the court jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action, a,s provided •in section 966 of the Kentucky Statutes, which reads as follows:
*842“The circuit court shall be a court of record, and shall have original jurisdiction of all matters, both in law and equity, of which jurisdiction is not exclusively delegated to some other tribunal, and shall have jurisdiction in all cases where the title to land is in question, or in which it is sought to enforce a lien upon, or to subject land by provisional remedy to the payment of debt.”
Except for the fact that jurisdiction w;as conferred upon the circuit court by virtue of the attachment, it would not have jurisdiction. The note was not secured by a lien on the land, and the justice’s or quarterly court had exclusive jurisdiction, under section 1086 of the Kentucky Statutes, as the amount was less than $50.
Hatton was the only party defendant to the action, and the summons was executed upon him in Powell county. The action was a transitory one, and section 79 of the Civil Code of Practice provides that: “In an action brought pursuant to section 78, against a single defendant, there shall be no judgment against him, unless he be summoned in the county wherein the action is brought, or unless he reside in such county when the action is brought and be summoned elsewhere in this state, or unless he. make defense to the action before objecting to the jurisdiction of the court. ’ ’
There is nothing in the record to show that Hat-ton resided in Estill county when the action was brought, and so it is clear that the service of summons upon him in Powell county did not authorize a judgment against him in Estill county.
This was not an action, within the meaning of section 62' of the Civil Code of Practice, for the recov*843ery or subjection of real property. This section reads:
“Actions must be brought in the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated: (1) For the recovery of real property, or an estate or interest therein; (2) for the partition of real property, except as provided in section 66; (3) for the sale of real property under title 10, chapter 14, or under a mortgage, lien, or other incumbrance or charge, except for debts of a decedent; (4) for an injury to real property. ’ ’
Subdivision 3 is the only one that can have any bearing upon this question. The words “lien, or other incumbrance or charge, ’ ’ in this subdivision, do not embrace a lien created by an attachment in an action like this, but refer to liens, incumbrances, or charges created by contract or the judgment of a court. In our opinion the judgment is void, and the motion to vacate should have been sustained.
Wherefore the judgment of the lower court is reversed, with directions to proceed in conformity' with this opinion; but on the return of the case Hatton, as often ruled, will be before the court.