109 S.W.2d 1194 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1937
Reversing.
On April 11, 1932, a suit was filed by Charles M. Myers, individually, and as the administrator of the estate of his deceased wife, Sallie A. Myers, against the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, to recover the proceeds of certain insurance policies on the life of Thomas E. Myers, aggregating $1,168.70. Charles M. Myers was the foster father of the insured. It was alleged that Thomas E. Myers had disappeared and had not been heard from since November, 1924, and facts showing his presumptive death were stated. Upon a trial, without a jury, the court rendered judgment on December 19, 1932, declaring Thomas E. Myers "to be and he is deemed in law dead, as having died on the 30th day of November, 1931," and granting recovery of the sum sued for. The judgment was paid shortly thereafter to Charles M. Myers.
On September 9, 1933, the manager of the insurance company's office in Covington received a telephone *525 call from a man who stated he was Thomas E. Myers, and who advised that he was mailing a letter to the company. The letter called attention to the judgment declaring him to be dead and the payment of the insurance proceeds to Charles M. Myers. The relevant substance of the letter was that he (the writer) had not defrauded the company but Charles M. Myers had done so; that, while the court had the case under advisement, the latter knew he was alive, as he had during that period visited Charles M. Myers. He had threatened him with prosecution for forging a check he (Thomas) had given seven or eight years before if he did not leave the community at once. The implication contained in the letter is that the writer had been a fugitive from justice. He listed the names of several persons who knew that Charles M. Myers had seen him at the time mentioned, and stated that he would later give the company his permanent address and aid it in righting the wrong. The authenticity of this letter as from the insured, Thomas E. Myers, was clearly established.
In November, 1934, the insurance company filed a suit against Charles M. Myers, individually, and as the administrator of Sallie A. Myers, to set aside and vacate the judgment and to grant it a new trial, under the provisions of sections 340 and 518, subsection 4, Civil Code of Practice. The answer admitted Charles M. Myers had testified on the original trial to the fact that his foster son, Thomas, had disappeared and had not been heard from for more than seven years, and admitted that he was alive. It denied the allegations of fraud and wrongful action and pleaded the innocence of the continued life of the insured until September, 1933.
Although Thomas E. Myers did not testify in this case, apparently because he could not be located, upon good and sufficient evidence the court found, as a fact, that Charles M. Myers did know that the insured was alive when the former judgment was rendered and had perpetrated a fraud upon the insurance company. In that conclusion we concur. But the court held he could grant no relief under the terms of section 340 of the Civil Code of Practice upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, for the defendant in the original action (the plaintiff in this) had not seasonably acted as prescribed by section 344 of the Civil Code of Practice. *526 In that conclusion also we concur. Expressing the opinion that the case called for the relief sought, the court, however, was of opinion that he could not grant it under subsection 4 of section 518 of the Civil Code of Practice, as construed by this court. He, therefore, denied and dismissed the petition. The insurance company appeals.
Fraud that will justify the setting aside of a judgment under this subsection of the Civil Code of Practice may be put in four classes.
If the fraud was practiced on the court, it must have been such as had the effect of presenting the appearance of jurisdiction, but which the court in fact did not have. The fraud must relate to jurisdictional matters and not to such as constituted a defense of the cause of action. Thus: In Logsdon v. Logsdon,
Another class of distinctive cases is that where a party was prevented from making a defense by being lulled into security and inaction, or by being misled or thrown off guard by a promise or some act of his adversary or his counsel. Within this class are May v. Vaughn, 91 S.W. 273, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 1088, where in violation of an agreement with other interested parties suit had been brought and judgment rendered under which land of a decedent was sold, all without the knowledge of those parties; and Amick v. Taylor,
Of the third class is a case which usually is decided or stated negatively. Such seeks to set aside the judgment because of fraud practiced in relation to the subject matter of the original action, or to a defense which might have been offered in it. If that is the ground or basis of the fraud, the remedy provided by section 518, subsection 4, of the Civil Code of Practice, is not available unless by reason of some fraud on the part of the successful party the defendant was prevented from making the defense which he had and has. An illustrative case is Ring v. Freeland,
There may be put in this third group cases where the sum and substance of the petitions to vacate judgments and grant new trials was merely newly discovered evidence, and it was hoped to avoid the limitations of time contained in section 344 of the Civil Code of Practice by designating the circumstances as fraudulent, when as a matter of fact they were not. The remedy of section 518, subsection 4, is not available in such cases. Union Gas Oil Company v. Wright,
In the fourth classification we have a number of cases not embraced in any of the above groups but which clearly come within the letter and the spirit of subsection 4, section 518, as presenting fraud practiced *528 in obtaining the judgment. We note a few that are more pertinent to the case at bar in which the judgments were vacated or good causes of action authorizing vacation were stated.
In Newland v. Gentry, 57 Ky. (18 B. Mon.) 666, the complainant, in a suit in equity involving the estate of a decedent and the rights of infants, instead of presenting to the court a fair and full statement of the true condition of the estate, concealed the existence of certain facts which, if disclosed, would have diminished his share in the estate and increased that of the defendants in the suit. It was held that the latter were entitled to have the judgment set aside because of fraud practiced in obtaining it.
In Owens v. Howard,
Other cases of concealment of material and controlling facts, while not quite analogous, are Commonwealth v. Harkness' Adm'r,
In Stearns Coal Lumber Company v. Tuggle,
"Counsel for appellant is, of course, correct in saying that a verdict won by fraud should be set aside."
But the refusal of the trial court to grant a new trial upon the evidence was sustained, although it is indicated in the course of the opinion that the defendant in the original action could, at the time of the trial, have discovered the evidence introduced in the new suit tending to minimize the extent and degree of injuries. *529
In Pacific Coal Mining Company v. Horn,
In Reynolds v. Evans,
"Of course, if a judgment were obtained through the perjured testimony of the successful party, clearly if that could be established, it would be such a fraud as would warrant the granting of a new trial under the express provisions of section 518 of the Civil Code of Practice."
The case of Greene v. Fitzpatrick, supra, seems to have misled the trial court, as expressed in his opinion, to the conclusion that the fraud meant by subsection 4 of section 518 is strictly limited to such fraud as had the effect of conferring jurisdiction upon the court which it does not have, and does not mean fraud which could have been made as a matter of defense or fraud perpetrated during the progress of the trial when the court has jurisdiction. That was the major consideration of the opinion, for the fraud alleged was upon the court, not upon the party. But, as we have demonstrated, the remedy afforded by this provision is by no means so constricted. Indeed, in that very case it was held that an amended petition, charging that the adopted woman against whom the suit in equity was brought had obtained the adoption judgment by fraud and undue influence, stated a good cause of action and the court had erred in sustaining a demurrer to it.
Here, it may be said, as the appellee maintains, that the fact that the insured was alive when the judgment was rendered was something the defendant could have but did not establish; that is, that this is the disclosure of newly discovered evidence sustaining the defense to the original action. It is more than that. The same could be said as to all the cases we have *530 analyzed and placed in the fourth classification. In a case of this kind, where there is and can be no question that gross fraud has been committed and money obtained unjustly from another, technicalities of interpretation or refinement of distinction should not and will not be permitted to embarrass the court in exercising its power to do justice.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to grant appellant a new trial as prayed.
Whole court sitting.