This is an action to enforce a judgment obtained in Florida in 1930. The defendant pleaded the statute of limitations. The applicable Florida statute is 20 years. Florida Statutes 95.11(1), F.S.A. The statute of limitations in Kentucky is 15 years. KRS 413.090(1). Under the Kentucky statute the action is barred. Under the Florida statute it is not. The lower court applied the Kentucky statute and dismissed the petition.
It is familiar law that the law of the forum controls remedies and procedures. In the absence of a statute, it is generally held that the law of the forum is controlling in an action instituted to enforce a judgment obtained in another state. McArthur v. Goddin,
The lower court held, and appellees insist, that KRS 413.090 is a bar to the action. That statute provides that an action shall he commenced within 15 years upon:
“(1) An action upon a'judgment or decree of any court of this state or of the United States, or of any state or territory thereof, * * *.”
The appellant contends there are exceptions to the rule and that this case falls within one of the exceptions. He relies on KRS 413.330 (formerly Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes 2541). which reads:
“If, by -the laws of any other state or country, an action upon a judgment or decree rendered in that state or country cannot be ináiutained there by reason of the lapse of time; and the judgment or decree is incapable of being * * * enforced there, an action upon it may not be maintained in this state, except in favor of a resident •thereof who has had the cause of action from the time is accrued.”
The basis for appellant’s argument is the construction placed on a somewhat similar statute, now designated as KRS 413.320 (formerly Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes 2542). That statute, prior to its amendment in 1942, provided:
“When a cause of action has arisen in another state or country between residents of such state or country or between them and residents of another state or country, and by the laws of the state or country where the cause of the action accrued an action can not be maintained thereon by reason of the lapse of time, no action can be maintained thereon in this state.”
Appellant cites the cases of Labatt v. Smith,
In an annotation in 75 A.L.R., page 231, it is stated:
“With the exception of Kentucky decisions, the rule is followed with little question that a statute admitting the bar of the law of any other state or country does not so adopt the foreign law as to lengthen the limitation period otherwise prescribed at the forum.”
It will be noted that KRS 413.330 (2541) merely prohibits recovery in this state on a cause of action which is barred by the statute of the state where it accrued. The Legislature has not said that if the action can be maintained in the other state it also can be maintained here.
Regardless of the soundness of the language used in some of the cases and the distinction drawn between the different statutes, this Court has expressly held that in an action brought in this state -on. a judgment of a Court of another state the statute of limitations of this state will be
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applied. In McArthur v. Goddin,
“ * * ■* The foreign statute is only to apply where the limitation is less than that mentioned in the Kentucky statute.”
In the case of Hoerter v. Garrity,
We conclude that in an action brought in this state to enforce a judgment of a court of another state whose statute of limitations is for a longer period than ours, the statute of limitations of this state should govern. This is in accord with the great weight of authority, and we think the rule is sound. The trial court having so decided, the judgment is affirmed.
