88 Ky. 584 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
April 20,1889, Louisville Industrial School of Reform, a corporation created by statute, commenced an action in the Louisville Law and Equity Court against City of Louisville and R. T. Scowden, the petition containing, ■substantially, the following statement of facts : That it is a charitable institution, organized for the purpose of receiving, taking care of and educating such minors as may be committed to its charge by legally constituted authorities, and has title and been for many years in the actual possession of about eighty-two acres of land in Jefferson county, conveyed to it in 1860 by City of Louisville, upon terms and conditions set out in the deed filed with the petition, upon which land it has expended large sums of money in the construction of houses for occupancy of inmates of the institution, for schools, workshops, and other necessary improvements. That the
The petition was signed by Muir & Heyman, John Roberts, Brown, Humphrey & Davie, for plaintiff, and sworn to by D. P. Eaulds, president of the board of managérs And on the same day, as prayed for in the petition, an order of injunction was made by the judge of the court restraining the defendants tearing down the fences or buildings of the plaintiff, or attempting in any way to carry-out the ordinance of April 18, or opening the proposed boulevard through the property.
April 22, as appears from the transcript before us,
May 2d the general council elected, or attempted to elect, a new board of managers of “ Industrial School of Reform ” in place of those in office when this action was commenced. And May 9th a resolution was passed by the new board, as it is called, in substance that Brown, Humphrey & Davie, Muir & Heyman, and John Roberts, previously employed by the plaintiff to institute and prosecute the action, were not longer authorized to act,. and that in their place T. L. Burnett, J. T. O’Neal, and Helm & Bruce be employed, authorized and directed to take such steps as may be necessary to secure the dismissal of said action. And on the same day the last mentioned attorneys, claiming to represent the plaintiff, filed the resolution referred to and moved the court to dismiss the action. Whereupon, as recited in the order, “the plaintiff,by Brown, Humphrey & Davie, Muir & Heyman, and John Roberts, claiming to represent it, objects to the appearance of Helm & Bruce, T. L. Burnett and J. T. O’Neal in this court as its attorneys, and objects to each and every motion made by them in this case, and objects to the dismissal of this case.”
May 10th the following order, in substance, was made: “ This cause coming on to be heard on motion of the ■ plaintiff' to dismiss this action, it is considered by the court that the board of managers of plaintiff elected by the general council May 2, 1889, are the true and only
And the question now before us arises upon a motion made in this coui’t on the 15th inst., by John Roberts and his associate counsel, claiming to represent the plaintiff ■below, for an order to the judge of the Louisville Law and Equity Court to grant it an appeal from the judgment just referred to.
Section 734, Civil Code, provides that: “ The mode of bringing the judgment of an inferior court to the Court of Appeals for reversal or modification shall be by an appeal, which shall be granted, as matter of right, to a party or privy against a pai’ty or privy by the court rendering the judgment, on motion made during the-term at which it is rendered, or, thereafter, by the clerk of the •Court of Appeals, on application of either party or his privy, upon filing in the office of said clerk a copy of the judgment from which he appeals.”
By the strict letter of that section there is no way for a party to bring a judgment of an inferior court to this •court for reversal or modification until after the term at which it was rendered has expired, unless the appeal be
The present anomalous condition of this case results from the relation existing between the plaintiff and defendant, in virtue of which, though two 'distinct corporations created by statute for distinct purposes, the latter has the power, by its general council, to appoint managers or trustees for the former, which power seems to have been exercised to the end, if not for the express purpose, of preventing any judicial inquiry whatever of the grievances that the plaintiff complains have been, or are about to be, committed under authority of the same general council.
The Civil Code was adopted to simplify and effectuate proceedings in courts of justice whereby legal rights may be determined and legal remedies enforced, and it should not be so used or construed as to defeat such objects.
It is a question of law whether the old or new board of managers has authority to conduct and control the action, which, in the interest of the nominal plaintiff',, each has a right to have passed on by this, as well as the inferior, court. Rut the effect of the Chancellor’s rulings-is that the plaintiff', though its action has been dismissed without any decision on the merits, can not be heard here at all, because the old board is denied the right to prosecute the appeal, and the new board not only refuses, but has attempted, by moving for dismissal, to preclude the plaintiff from appealing.
There is another aspect of the case entitled to consideration in a court of equity; that is, the duty of the Chancellor always to see to it that the rights of a party such as the plaintiff are protected. And it is a serious, question, though not now necessary to decide, whether,, conceding the new to be the legal board, the Chancellor ought to have entertained its motion to dismiss the action, when it was, apparently, so prejudicial to the interests and rights of the plaintiff, unable to speak for itself or the infant beneficiaries of its charity.
The only question left open is whether this court, having the right to revise the judgment of the lower court, can be ousted of its jurisdiction by an error of that court in denying to the plaintiff' its right of appeal.
Section 2, article 4, of the constitution provides that “ the Court of Appeals shall have appellate jurisdiction only, under such restrictions and regulations, not repugnant to this constitution, as may from time to time be prescribed by law.”
As said in Mitcheson v. Foster, 3 Met., 324, “ this grant of appellate jurisdiction necessarily implies the grant of
Wherefore, the judge of the Louisville Law. and Equity 'Court is hereby directed to sustain the motion made in ■open court by John Roberts and others, in the name of the plaintiff, May .10, 1889, and to grant to it an appeal to this court from the judgment rendered by said Louisville Law and Equity Court dismissing the action pending therein, of Louisville Industrial School of Reform, plaintiff, against City of Louisville and R. T. Scowden, ■defendants. And the clerk of this court is ordered to immediately certify this mandate to the said judge.