205 Ky. 327 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion op the Court by
Dismissing the petition for writ of prohibition.
The defendant, A. T. W. Manning, judge of the Laurel circuit court, issued a .rule against plaintiff, J. S. Tompkins, to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt of court committed in the publication and printing of certain alleged contemptuous matter in the Laurel County Sun, a paper owned and published by plaintiff. Tompkins employed as his attorneys, the other plaintiffs, B. Gr. Reams, Reuben Johnson, W. M. Lewis and Ray C. Lewis, and they prepared a response to the rule issued against Tompkins and the latter swore to it and it was filed in the Laurel circuit court by the attorneys. The defendant construed the subject matter of the response as also contemptuous and entered a fine against Tompkins and his four attorneys of $30.00 each. Two of the plaintiffs paid the fine and the other three replevied the ones entered against them, and thereupon all plaintiffs filed their joint petition in this court asking for a writ of prohibition against the judge of the Laurel circuit court “and all other persons acting through him or by reason of the judgment and replevin bonds aforesaid, prohibiting and restraining him and them from enforcing or attempting to enforce the collection of either of the replevin bonds herein mentioned and from attempting to commit either of the plaintiffs herein to jail by reason of the said replevin bonds or the judgment herein mentioned by reason of their failing to pay the same or either of the same; . . . and for an order commanding and directing the said judge aforesaid to enter an order of record in the Laurel circuit court cancelling, setting aside 'and holding for naught the judgment aforesaid,” etc.
If it should be conceded that the facts of this case conferred on this court jurisdiction under section 110 of the Constitution to grant the relief prayed for, we would then be confronted with the fact that the judgment, the
Section 950-1 of the 1922 edition of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes expressly denies the right of appeal from judgments “punishing contempt.” Notwithstanding that statute, we have entertained appeals from a class of contempt judgments where the punishment was such as to authorize the appeal upon sufficiently appearing grounds, chief among which was when the court was proceeding without jurisdiction, but, in which class of cases, the instant one does not belong, even if the amount of the fine
“Notwithstanding, however, the doubt which we entertain of our jurisdiction in this case, we have concluded to waive the point and to treat the particular case as one of which we have jurisdiction in this original action and determine it upon its merits, though in doing so we would not'be understood as creating a precedent for .similar cases in the future. ’ ’
The latest case from this court discussing the circumstances and conditions under which this court will assume jurisdiction to issue the writ is that of Natural Gas Products Co. v. I. H. Thurman, Judge, etc., 205 Ky. 100, and in that opinion the case of Ohio River Contract Co. v. Gordon, 170 Ky. 412, is referred to and inserted ex-eei'pts from it were made in the Thurman opinion. There will also be found many other cases referred to in the Gordon opinion, as is also true of -the Huggins opinion.
We, therefore, conclude that we have no jurisdiction of this petition and it is dismissed.