Maddox v. Giltner

11 S.W.2d 426 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1928

Dismissing appeal.

This action was brought in the Henry circuit court by appellant and plaintiff below, Margaret M. Maddox, surviving widow of E.C. Maddox, against appellees and defendants below, R.C. Giltner et al., trustees of the Eminence Christian Church of Eminence, Kentucky, and Christian Church Widows' and Orphans' Home of Kentucky, to obtain the correct construction of the last will and testament of E.C. Maddox, which holographic will was written and executed on January 14, 1905. The action was brought under the provisions of chapter 4a of the 1927 edition of Carroll's Kentucky Codes, commonly known as the "Declaratory Judgment Act," and being sections 639a-1 to section 639a-12 of the Civil Code. Defendants filed a general demurrer to the petition, but later withdrew it and the cause was submitted alone on the petition and exhibits, followed by a judicial construction of the will and adjudging plaintiff to be the absolute owner of the property of the testator covered by it. From that judgment, plaintiff has attempted to appeal by filing in this court a complete transcript of the record.

In her petition plaintiff alleged that under the terms of her husband's will she became, under the facts as they existed at the time of the filing of the action, the absolute owner of all the property attempted to be devised by it, and she prayed that it be so adjudged. The court rendered judgment giving her all the relief she asked, and *579 the first question for determination is: Whether a litigant, who succeeds in the trial court and obtains all the relief he seeks therein, may appeal from the judgment in his favor?

The question has heretofore been presented to us in a number of cases, some of which are Light v. Miller, 187 Ky. 57,218 S.W. 307; Sparks v. Sparks, 190 Ky. 427, 227 S.W. 571; Gentry v. Gentry, 217 Ky. 806, 290 S.W. 665, and Malloy v. Barkley,219 Ky. 671, 294 S.W. 168, and in each of them it was answered in the negative. Other authorities are referred to in those opinions as sustaining the conclusion therein reached, among which are 2 R. C. L. 56, par. 36, and 3 C. J. 629, sec. 491, and page 635, sec. 495. See, also, Freeman's annotations to the case of In re Switzer, 201 Mo. 66, 98 S.W. 461, reported in 119 Am. St. Rep. 731, annotations on page 748. The rule of practice so announced in the cases, and by the authorities referred to, is in perfect harmony with the only object and purpose in allowing appeals, which is always a matter of grace. When a litigant succeeds in obtaining all he asks in the trial court having jurisdiction of the cause, he no longer has a grievance to be corrected by an appeal to a reviewing court, whose chief duties are to correct abuses in the trial court, whereby the rights of a litigant were prejudiced and he was thereby deprived of his just dues under the law. When he has no such grievance, he is not entitled by appeal to have the appellate court approve the judgment in his favor.

Of course, the rule does not apply where the appellant only partially succeeds in his contentions below, since in that case he may appeal, if other conditions permit it, to obtain a correction of the errors of which he complains and by which he failed to obtain all the relief he asked. But here, we repeat, the judgment appealed from gave appellant everything she asked, and, under the rule adopted in the cases, supra, and announced by the text-writers referred to, she is not entitled to prosecute this appeal; and the fact that the proceeding was under the Declaratory Judgment Act does not alter the rule, since the Malloy case was one practiced under the same statute, and we dismissed the appeal upon the ground that appellant therein obtained all the relief she sought in the trial court and had no right to prosecute it. *580

Section 5 of the statute creating the remedy adopted herein, and being section 639a-5 of the Civil Code of Practice, in extending the right of appeal, says:

"Any party aggrieved by a declaratory judgment order or decree, rendered in the circuit court, may within sixty days after such judgment, order or decree has become final, . . . take and perfect an appeal to the Court of Appeals in the manner now provided by law for appeals."

No court, so far as we are aware, has ever construed such language as giving the right of appeal to one who entirely succeeded in the trial court. On the contrary, in order to be "aggrieved," so as to confer the right of appeal, the one seeking it must have been deprived by the judgment of some pecuniary or individual corporeal right, and, unless so done, he has not been aggrieved within the meaning of such statutes. 2 R. C. L. 52, sec. 34.

The conclusion reached dispenses with the necessity of considering, or in any wise determining, the merits of the case; but, for the reasons stated, the appeal is dismissed.