68 Ky. 81 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1868
delivered the opinion op the court:
The appellant, Lewis Triplett, brought an action in the Adair circuit court against S. G. Suddarth, of that county, and W. T. Scott, of Lexington, Kentucky, for damages charged on a contract of partnership between them for the commendation and sale of Triplett’s patent right, as inventor of a carbine gun.
The summons to Adair, and that also to Fayette, were •both returned executed in time for trial at the November term, 1867, of the court; and at that term, Suddarth having answered, and Scott not appearing, a jury sworn to try the issue on Suddarth’s traverse and assess damages against Scott, returned a verdict against Suddarth for fifty dollars, and against Scott for seven thousand five hundred dollars.
Shortly after the expiration of that term, Scott filed a petition in equity for a new trial and an intermediate injunction. . Judge Newman, of an adjoining circuit, having granted the injunction, Scott afterwards presented to him a petition for a change of venue, verified by his own affidavit only, and alleging that Triplett had so prejudiced the judge and people of Adair, and enlisted the bar against him, as to leave him no reasonable prospect of an impartial trial in- that circuit. On that presentation, with notice, judge Newman ordered a change of venue to Hardin county, in another circuit, but not the nearest to Adair; and, on the payment of the legal fees for transmission within ten days succeed
In revising the judgment, we shall consider briefly two questions only — 1st. Was the change of venue lawful ? 2d. Was the final judgment right?
If the act of 1860 be the only law applicable to the petition on wrhich the judge ordered the change of venue, the order was irregular and erroneous, because the petition was not supported by the number of affidavits required by that act; but, as the judge had general jurisdiction over changes of venue in civil cases, his order, however erroneous, was not void, but correctable on the motion to remand; and we may presume that he might have sustained the motion to remand had not the requisite number and character of supplemental affi
As Bramlette was prepared and authorized to file an answer and make complete defense in Scott’s absence, |3cott’s non-attendance should not be considered culpable negligence, especially as he lived so remote from the court, and as, moreover, he had reason to expect that his co-defendant would also represent him.
The “ accident” to Bramlette is, therefore, as available to Scott in this case as if it had occurred to himself; and, according to both the common law and our Code of Practice, the petition presented a sufficient excuse for Scott’s technical default, and entitled him to a new trial as ordered.
Wherefore, the judgment for a new trial is affirmed.