Taylor v. Stevenson
Decision Date | 15 October 1948 |
Citation | 309 Ky. 68,215 S.W.2d 947 |
Parties | TAYLOR v. STEVENSON. |
Court | Kentucky Court of Appeals |
Rehearing Denied Jan. 18, 1949.
Original action by George H. Taylor for a writ of mandamus to compel E. D. Stevenson, Judge of the Pike Circuit Court, to enter an order for sale of land.
Writ denied, and petition dismissed.
Stoll Muir, Townsend, Park & Mohney and John L. Davis, all of Lexington, for appellant.
Hobson & Scott, of Pikeville, for appellee.
STANLEY Commissioner.
This is an original action for a writ of mandamus directed to the judge of the Pike Circuit Court to enter an order for the sale of land. After the death of the original respondent Judge R. Monroe Fields, the case was revived against his successor in office, Judge E. D. Stevenson.
In actions brought under an act of 1906, Chapter 22, Laws 1906 it was adjudged on February 14, 1908, that certain large bodies of land in Pike and other counties, aggregating nearly 450,000 acres, be forfeited to the Commonwealth for the nonpayment of taxes. The judgments were affirmed in Eastern Kentucky Coal Lands Corp. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, 127 Ky. 667, 106 S.W. 260, 108 S.W. 1138, 32 Ky.Law Rep. 129. And on further appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States they were affirmed. Eastern Kentucky Coal Lands Corp. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, 219 U.S. 140, 31 S.Ct. 171, 55 L.Ed. 137. The judgments specifically reserved all questions in issue other than the constitutionality of the act and the right of the Commonwealth to forfeit the lands.
It appears that no further action was taken in the case in Pike County in relation to what is designated as tract No. 21 until one of the defendants therein, George H. Taylor, filed a motion on May 10, 1947, for the entry of an order of sale thereof. The Commonwealth, through the Commonwealth's Attorney for the district, filed an objection. The petition of Taylor in this court alleges that Judge Fields had declined to enter an order of sale as prayed, 'although it was the legal duty of the defendant to do so.'
The response of Judge Fields files copies of the record since the making of the motion. It shows that testimony was heard proving the loss of the original records in the case other than the orders of the court. Judge Fields stated his willingness to conform with any views expressed by this court and, of course, to obey its orders. He added, however, that he had regarded the following order, which he had previously entered, as a final and appealable judgment. After reciting the current proceedings, the order continues:
Under the power granted to this court by section 110 of the Constitution to issue such writs as may be necessary to control courts of inferior jurisdiction, we may direct a circuit court to act in a given case when sufficient cause has been shown why he should take some sort of action, one way or another. But in an original proceeding this court will not control the judicial discretion of a trial court by mandatorily directing what ...
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