115 Ky. 255 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion of .the court by
'Affirming.
One W. W. Hill, as committee for William Clark, a luna, tic, recovered judgment in the Jefferson circuit court (law and equity division) against J. Esten Cooke on two promissory notes, aggregating $1,000. Cooke made defense on tbe ground of payment, but, judgment going against him, he appealed to this court, in doing which he executed a super
This court on December 11, 1901, reversed the judgment of the lower court, in a majority opinion, which on June lá, 1902, was withdrawn, and the judgment of reversal set
The action was instituted under sections 1956 and 1958 of the Kentucky Statutes, which are as follows:
“Sec. 1956. If any person shall lose to another at one time, or within twenty-four hours, five- dollars or more, or property or other thing of that value, and shall pay, transfer or deliver the same, such loser or any creditor of his may recover the same, or the value thereof, from the.winner, or any transferee of the winner, having notice of the consideration, by suit brought within five years after the payment, transfer or delivery. . . _
“Sec. 1958. If .such loser, or his creditor, does not sue for the money or thing lost within six months after its' payment, or delivery, and prosecute the suit to recover with' due diligence, any other person may sue the winner and recover treble the amount or value of the money or thing lost, if suit be so brought within five years from the delivery or payment.”
The action here allowed is in the nature of a penalty for a violation of the law; otherwise the Legislature would have had no constitutional power to enact the statute which authorizes it. That body may not take private property for private use, except by way of punishment for an offense. All gaming statutes are necessarily penal, and the one under which appellant seeks a recovery in this case is highly so. It is therefore to be strictly construed, especially when its harsh provisions are invoked by a mere stranger and informer to enforce a penalty against the estate of a lunatic who is as helpless as if he were dead. We find a deliverance of this court, made as far back as 1831, which announced
Under the statute supra the informer can recover only of the winner in a gaming transaction, and the winner must have received or collected the money or property won by him. Until he has done so, he does not become liable to the informer, or any one else, in an action for reimbursement or to recover the statutory penalty. The fact, if it be one, that the notes in question were taken for gaming debts which Clark had won of Cooke, did not make the former liable in an action brought by the informer. In order to constitute the offense for which the penalty may be exacted under the statute, it is necessary that the winner must have collected the money or received the property from the loser. It is not alleged in the petition or claimed in argument that Clark ever collected of Cooke or any one
We are also of opinion that no cause of action exists in appellant’s behalf against Hill, as committee of Clark, because of the payment by R. T. Jacob of the amount due on the supersedeas bond. Neither notes nor judgment were ever merged in the supersedas bond, and they constituted no part of the consideration of the bond. The bond was based upon an the supersedeas bond, and they constituted no part of the consideration of the bond. The bond was based upon an entirely different consideration. It was given solely to stay proceedings on the judgment of the lower court pending the appeal, and was executed nearly twenty years after the execution of the notes. By the execution of the bond, R. T. Jacob did not, in any sense, become a party to the original notes or their consideration; nor did the supersedeas bond merge the judgment against Cooke, or take the place of it as a replevin bond. Hughes’ Adm’r v. Hardesty, 13 Bush, 367. In the suit which Hill, as committee of Clark, brought against R. T. Jacob on the supersedeas bond, this court held that, though the notes executed by Cooke to Clark may have been given for a gaming consideration, yet the judgment rendered on them was not void, nor was the supersedeas bond void, and that the stay of proceedings on the judgment constituted a valid consideration for the bond; and so R. T. Jacob was compelled to pay it by the judg
For the reasons given, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.