Dismissing appeal.
On June 24, 1939, the grand jury of Russell county returned an indictment against Kay Cagle charging him with a violation of the Local Option Law, Kentucky Statutes, Section 2554c-1. On September 23, 1939, the sixth day of the September, 1939, term of the Russell circuit court, the case was called for trial, and the defendant being absent judgment was entered against him for the minimum penalty provided by law; that is, a fine of $20 and imprisonment in the county jail for 30 days. On October 12, 1939, Cagle filed in the Russell circuit court his petition in equity in which J.B. Stephens, clerk of the Russell circuit court, A.W. Leach, sheriff, and J.C. Stephenson, jailer, were named defendants. He asked that J.C. Stephenson be enjoined from holding him on the capias pro fine which had been issued, and that J.B. Stephens, clerk, and A.W. Leach, sheriff, be enjoined from issuing or executing any other process on the judgment which had been entered on September 23, 1939, and he further asked that that judgment be set aside, vacated, and held for naught, and that he be granted a new trial. He alleged in his petition that on the day the case was set for trial he was in a hospital at Danville, Kentucky, and unable to be present in the Russell circuit court, and that he remained in the hospital until September 25, 1939. He further alleged that *Page 406 he was innocent of the charge contained in the indictment. A special demurrer to the petition was sustained, and the plaintiff filed an amended petition in which he alleged that he was confined in a hospital in Danville, Kentucky, when the judgment was rendered against him on September 23, 1939; that he was represented by counsel who was present in court when the case was called for trial and informed the court that the plaintiff was confined in a hospital. He further alleged that he did not have an opportunity to be heard by himself or counsel or to meet the witnesses face to face, and that he had been deprived of the rights guaranteed to him by the Constitution of Kentucky. A special demurrer to the petition as amended was sustained, and the petition and amended petition were dismissed. The plaintiff has appealed.
Since the judgment which appellant seeks to have vacated was for a fine of $20 and imprisonment for only 30 days, the Court of Appeals has no jurisdiction of an appeal from that judgment.
Appellant's appeal from the judgment dismissing his petition seeking a new trial is only an indirect method of appealing from the original judgment. Apparently appellant is attempting to proceed under Section 518 of the Civil Code of Practice, but this section does not apply to criminal cases. Wellington v. Commonwealth,
The purpose of this action being to set aside a judgment from which an appeal could not be prosecuted, this court is without jurisdiction to consider the present appeal, and it is dismissed.
