168 S.W.2d 1002 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1943
Reversing.
As shown in Crook v. Schumann et al.,
The objects and purposes of the suit are stated in the opinion delivered on the first appeal. The last of two judgments rendered in March, 1942, that the defendants were guilty of civil contempt, assessed fines against them and struck all of their pleadings from the record. It was adjudged that all allegations of the petition and amendments should be taken for confessed, but the affirmative relief granted the plaintiffs was confined to cancelling 2,874 shares of stock that had been issued to the defendants and adjudging that they owned only 126 shares. The motion of the plaintiffs to impound the records of the corporation was overruled. It was further ordered that "all other matters except as specifically adjudged herein are held up for further orders." In another place it is ordered that all matters be "held up for the further hearing by the court upon proper pleadings if filed."
Amended Petition "A," subsequently filed, reiterates some of the allegations previously made. It pleads facts sufficient to bring the defendants within the terms of Sec. 2353, Ky. Stats., KRS
The defendants filed an objection to the court signing the Rule Day order entered on May 4, 1942, by the clerk, showing the filing of the amended petition without leave of court, and a motion to strike it from the record. They also moved to quash notices to take depositions, the returns of the officers thereon, and to strike the depositions themselves, because, among other things, the judgment rendered at the March term was final and a bar. The plaintiffs moved for a judgment pro confesso and a mandatory injunction as prayed. The final order recited that the court, on its own motion, sustained a general demurrer to Amended Petition "A." It and the depositions were stricken from the record except for the purpose of appeal.
The power of the court to entertain further pleadings along the line covered by the amended petition was not spent by the judgments entered in March, 1942. Excepting to cancel part of the stock which had been issued to the defendants, the whole case was left open. The Court had impliedly invited or consented to further pleading. As is often said among lawyers, the plaintiffs were again firing both barrels, their former volleys not having produced results because of the persistent opposition of their adversaries. We cannot refrain from observing *334 that the acrimony, personalities and other extraneous matter in all the briefs have obscured the legal questions, with which alone we are concerned. We really do not know upon what grounds the court based his ruling.
The appellants insist that it was not proper for the court to sustain a general demurrer to their amended petition when none had been filed. As we have stated, there was a motion to strike it and the same end might have been attained by sustaining that motion. But by the procedure followed by the court the plaintiffs were given the advantage of an opportunity to amend further. See Mann v. Woodward,
It seems to us the allegations of the amended petition, as we have briefly outlined, were sufficient to establish a constructive trust and to authorize the injunction sought.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed and the case remanded for consistent proceedings.