Lewis v. Miller

Opinion of the coubt by

CHIEF JUSTICE BURNAM

'Denying wbet.

The plaintiff, Katherine D. Lewis, has applied to this court for a writ of prohibition against the Honorable Shackelford Miller, judge of the First division of the chancery branch of the Jefferson circuit court, to prevent him *626from proceeding with the trial of an action instituted against her in the Jefferson circuit court by the Citizens’ National Bank of Louisville. She alleges, in substance, that in January, 1875, .the Citizens’ National Bank recovered a judgment against her father, Blanton Duncan, deceased, for $1,750, with interest, upon which execution issued, and was returned, “No property found;” that on the 16th day of March, 1903, the bank instituted a. suit against her on the debt, alleging that she had received more than the amount of their judgment from the estate of her father, as heir at law; and that summons was served upon her on this suit while she was temporarily in Kentucky for the purpose of testifying as a witness in an appeal which she’ had taken from the judgment of the Jefferson county court probating the will of her father; that she entered her special appearance in the action filed against her, and moved the court to quash' the summons which was served upon her on the ground that she could not be legally sued, under the circumstances; that Judge Miller overruled her motion to quash the summons, and will, unless prohibited by this court, proceed to hear and determine the action.

In support of this motion, we have been referred to numerous decisions of courts of last resort in other States, holding, in substance, a suitor or witness to be exempt from the service of process while without the jurisdiction of his residence for the purpose of attending court in an action to which he is a party, or in which he is to be sworn as a witness. But this exact question seems not to have been adjudicated by the courts of this State. But in Catlett v. Morton, 14 Ky., 122, a member of the Legislature, while attending its deliberations, was sued for debt in the Franklin circuit court, and he pleaded his privilege as a member under the constitutional provision which provides: “No *627person or persons shall under any pretense, directly or indirectly, or by any ways or means whatever, arrest, assail, menace or otherwise disturb the person of a member during his privilege except on legal process for treason, felony or breach of the peace.” But it was held by this court, in an opinion by Judge Mills, that the only effect of this provision was to protect members from arrest, and that they were subject to thé execution of' any other process as other citizens. The rule laid down in this case was subsequently followed in Johnson v. Offutt, 61 Ky., 19. Privilege from arrest seems to have been the limit allowed suitors and witnesses at common law whilst going to, attending and returning from court on business connected with their suits. See A. & E. Ency. of Law, vol. 16, p. 40, and cases cited there. Greenleaf on Evidence (15th Ed.), sections 316, 317 and 318. An interesting history of the origin and reason of this rule at common law is given by Judge Reeve in, King v. Coit, 4 Day, 129. He says: “When a member,of Parliament was arrested, the ancient practice was to obtain a writ of privilege, not from the suit, but for the arrest, and a supersedeas issued to the court to stay the proceeding as long as the privilege of Parliament lasted. A more summary mode was afterwards had of obtaining a discharge by motion; but it was not from suit, but from arrest, and was so expressly laid down in the case of Pitt, Comyns, 444, Fortes, 342, Cas. t. Hardw., 28.” The only statutory provisions which we have in force which bear upon the question is section 81 of the Civil Code, which provides: “In an action brought pursuant to section 78 a defendant who is summoned out of the county in which it is brought, and who had not resided therein when the action was begun, can not be summoned in that or any other action of' the plaintiff while visiting such county for the sole purpose *628of defending the first-named action.” And section 512 of the Code provides: “A witness shall not be liable to be sued in a county in which he does not reside by being served with a summons in such county while going, returning or attending in obedience to a summons.” It is evident that plaintiff can not support her contention under either of these provisions of the Code, as it is not contended that the Citizens’ National Bank had anything to do with bringing her to this State, or that she came in obedience to any summons served upon her. After creating the debt sued for, plaintiff’s ancestor voluntarily went beyond the jurisdiction of the courts of this State without making provision for the payment of his obligations. And it would be a great stretch of interstate comity to hold that Duncan would have been exempt from suit at the hands of his creditor if he had voluntarily returned to this State for the purpose of testifying as a witness or attending to litigation in which he was interested. Plaintiff, to the extent that she has received assets from his estate as his heir at law, occupies no better attitude. And it seems to us, both under the common law, the decisions of this court, and the statute law, in so far as they have any bearing nponi the question, that plaintiff is not privileged from suit at the hands of the citizens of this State while voluntarily attending a trial in which she is interested, as a witness-.

The motion for a writ of prohibition is therefore overruled.