166 S.W.2d 879 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1942
Reversing.
William Couch contested the nomination of A.M. Gross as the Republican candidate for Sheriff of Perry County at the August, 1941, primary election. Because the regular judge of the Perry Circuit Court was engaged in another county in his district, Honorable H. Clay Kaufman, of Lancaster, was designated as a special judge to try the contest. After a hearing and submission of the case, Judge Kaufman took the case under consideration and went home after entering an order for a transcript of the evidence to be made. He later prepared an opinion and judgment declaring Couch to be entitled to the nomination and awarding him judgment against Gross, including his costs. He signed this and sent it to the clerk of the Perry Circuit Court with a letter *305 directing that the judgment be entered on the order book and the pages containing it be sent to him at Lancaster or to Lexington for the purpose of signing same. The clerk entered the judgment on Saturday, September 27th, together with orders filing the transcript and bill of exceptions. The clerk and a special deputy testified that, pursuant to agreement of the lawyers on both sides, he appointed a special deputy to take the sheets of the order book containing the judgment to Lancaster on Monday, the 29th. The orders contain objections of the defendant Gross, but there is no entry of an objection to the procedure. Gross died that day about 11:30 a. m., while the deputy clerk and one of his attorneys were on their way to Lancaster. Judge Kaufman was advised of the death by telephone before they reached there. By telephone and in person, Gross's counsel objected to Judge Kaufman signing the order. He did so, nevertheless, that afternoon about 4:30 o'clock. The sheets were properly placed in the order book upon the return of the deputy clerk. It had been the purpose of Gross's counsel to bring the record to Frankfort direct from Lancaster and file the appeal. Because of the intervening developments that was not done.
Thereafter the administratrix of Gross's estate filed a motion to vacate and have the judgment declared void upon several grounds. The regular judge of the Perry Circuit Court, after a trial, overruled the motion. The administratrix has prayed an appeal in this court from that judgment. By express statement in brief she waives all claims other than to be relieved from the payment of the court costs in the contest proceeding, which it is alleged amount to more than $300.00.
The original judgment itself is not void for any absence of power in the court to render it. The question relates to the signing of the order book giving it life. Although appearing on the book, no judgment has any force in the absence of an official signing by the judge. Section 390, Civil Code of Practice; 28.050 Ky. Rev. Statutes (Sec. 378, Ky. Stats.); Ewell v. Jackson,
We have a very similar case in Sublett v. Gardner,
"If Bach [the special judge] heard and determined the case without holding court at all, the judgment in question was void. If he signed the order book in blank and the judgment was thereafter entered by the clerk, over his signature, such signing could not give validity to the judgment."
Upon that ground the judgment was held void. That case was decided in 1911, which was some time before the enactment of the statute, now published as KRS 23.150 (Sec. 964b-1, Ky. Stats.), authorizing the making *307 of an order or judgment anywhere in the judicial district of which the county where the case is pending is a part.
We are of the opinion that the direction to enter the judgment and the signing of the order book in the instant case by Judge Kaufman, in a county not in the district containing Perry, are ineffective. The prepared judgment, therefore, stands as if it had never been entered. The court should have so ruled on the motion of Gross's administratrix.
This conclusion, however, probably gives the appellant only an empty victory, for the special judge may yet properly direct the entry of the judgment nunc pro tunc or ratify the unauthorized entry by the clerk and sign the order book in Perry County or elsewhere in that judicial district, the same becoming valid from the beginning. Shuey v. Hoffman,
The motion to grant an appeal is sustained and the judgment is reversed.