107 Ky. 642 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1900
deltvebed the opinion oe the coubt.
Plaintiff sought in this action to recover damages against the defendants upon the ground that they had unlawfully placed five hundred large, green, .white oak logs in the creek on which his farm was situated, knowing that they were so heavy that they would not float, and had drifted them to a point below his residence, where they lodged in such a manner as to dam up the waters of the creek so as to change its channel and cause it to wash away valuable bottom land, and to obstruct the road to his residence.
The petition was filed on the 19th of June, 1895,' and judgment was rendered bjr default on the 31st of July, 1895, for the sum of “five hundred,” with interest thereon from the first day of August, 1895. The judgment did not show whether it was for dollars, cents or mills.
At the same term of the court in which the judgment was rendered a motion was entered by EL Herman,- one of the defendants, to set it aside. This motion was continued, without action on the part of the court, until the April term, 1896, when appellee moved the court to correct the judgment by inserting the word “dollars” after the word “hundred,” and at the same term the motion of the defendant Herman, to set aside the judgment was withdrawn.
At the September term, 1897, appellants, as personal representatives of Herman, who had died in the meantime, entered a motion to' set aside the judgment rendered against their decedent on various grounds; among others: First, because it had been rendered without any summons having been executed upon their decedent; and, second, because the judgment was rendered by default, no proof having been introduced to establish the amount of damage alleged, and no allegation of any express promise.
It is insisted by appedleA that the appeal can not be entertained by this e-ourt, ¡is more than two years had expired after the right to appeal first accrued before the appeal was granted by the1 ederk of this court, in May, 1898.
If the judgment was vend for want of service1 eif process, no appeal could be prosemuted on that ground until there had beam a motion to sed aside the1 judgment, and so the' right of appeal did not accrue until the motion to set aside the judgment was overruled at the September term, 1897, whem the1 appeal was in fact granted.
The transcript was filed March 21, 1898, which was more than twemty days before1 the see’ond term after the granting of the1 appeal, and so there1 was no obstacle to the prosecution of the appt*al granted by the lower court, which was the1 appeal on which appellant relied whem she filed her transcript, as shown by the1 statement them filed and the ederk’s inelorsement on the transe’ript.
That appeal, liowewer, raises only the question whether the judgment is void, and not'whether it is erroneous, as it is granted emly from the order overruling the motion to set aside1 the judgment. Therefore1, to e-.orreud. mere errors in the original judgment appellant must redy on the appeal from that judgment granted by the ederk of this court. That appeal, it is true, was not granted until more than two years after the judgment was rendered, but, in the absence1 of a verified plea, that fact is not available to defeat the1 appeal.
Section 757 of Bullitt’s Code, provider:
“If it appear' from the record that an appeal was improperly granted, or that the appellant's right to prose*646 cute it further has ceased, the appellee may, upon stating the grounds in writing, move the court to dismiss the appeal.”
And section 758 provides:
"If the facts mentioned in section 757 be not shown by the record, the appellee may plead them by a verified answer, to which the appellant may file a verified reply; and the questions of law and fact thereon shall be heard and determined by the court on or after the day on which the case is set for trial.”
And it was held in Riley v. Reed, 13 Bush, 411, that it was the practice of this court to require the statute of limitation to be pleaded when an appeal was sought to be dismissed on the ground that it was' barred by limitation. In this proceeding appellee has- made no motion to dismiss the appeal, stating the grounds in writing on the face of the record, as required by section 757 of the Code, nor by verified answer, as required by section 758; and the question can not be raised for the first time by a brief.
There is nothing in the record to show that there was ever any service of process upon the defendant Herman, and the decretal recital is not sufficient evidence of service without other proof, and' a judgment rendered by default, where there has been no service of process upon the defendant, or appearances, is void, and may be reversed upon appeal. (See Long v. Montgomery, 6 Bush, 394; Ruby v. Grace, 2 Duv., 540.)
Besides, this is an action of tort sounding in damages, not accompanied by any allegation of an express promise or facts showing an implied promise to pay such damages, which, under the provisions of section 126 of the Civil Code, must be proven, even if not specifically denied.