Affirming. *Page 100
The appellant secured a judgment of divorce from the appellee in the Fayette Circuit Court in the year 1935. She neither sought nor was awarded alimony. The judgment directed generally a restoration of property obtained by the parties by virtue of the marriage relation.
In the year 1940 the appellee filed in the Fayette Circuit Court action No. 25077 in which he secured judgment against the appellant for $5,439.19, representing the value of a dairy herd and a half interest in a farm transferred by him to the appellant while they were married. The judgment merely effectuated the general judgment of restoration of property entered in the divorce action. The appellant defended the action but did not set up a claim to alimony as a defense to the appellee's cause of action, nor did she plead as a defense the payment by her of a $5,700 note for the appellee, on which she was surety. The pertinency of this latter claim will appear later.
Execution was issued on the appellee's judgment for $5,439.19 and levied on a house and lot in Lexington owned by the appellant. Notice of the execution and levy was recorded. After the recording of the notice a mortgage on the house and lot, executed by the appellant to a bank, was put to record.
The present action was filed by the appellee against the appellant and the mortgagee bank, seeking a sale of the house and lot to satisfy the execution lien, it being alleged that the bank had notice of the appellee is lien when it took the mortgage. In the petition the judgment in action No. 25077 was pleaded verbatim and this judgment shows that it was effectuating a restoration of property obtained by virtue of the marriage relation. The bank answered, disclaiming any lien on the property. The appellant, as a defense, sought to recover alimony as a set-off against the execution lien and also pleaded that during the marriage relation she had been required to pay a note of the appellee for $5,700, which she had signed as surety and which was secured by mortgage on her property.
The chancellor sustained a demurrer to the appellant's pleading and, no further defense being offered, adjudged the appellee a lien on the house and lot by reason of the levy of the execution. *Page 101
On this appeal it is insisted that the appellant was entitled to assert in this action her claim to alimony and her claim on account of the $5,700 note paid by her. In support of this contention the appellant relies on Hanks v. Hanks,
Counsel for appellant makes much complaint because the chancellor, in arriving at his conclusion, took judicial notice of action No. 25077 in his court. It is insisted, that the defense of res adjudicata, if not pleaded, must be shown by the adversary's pleading in order for the question to be available on demurrer, and that it was not pleaded here and did not appear in the pleadings in this action. But, even if the chancellor was not authorized to take judicial notice of the former actions between the parties in his court (a question not decided), the judgment in action No. 25077 was pleaded in the petition and this judgment was sufficient to disclose that the matter was res adjudicate. Even if this were not true, then the pleadings filed by the appellant after *Page 102 the chancellor rendered his opinion and before judgment was entered were amply sufficient to establish the defense of res adjudicata. These pleadings, filed by the appellant, pleaded the petition, answer and judgment in action No. 25077 and clearly established the defense of res adjudicata.
Complaint is also made that a second judgment was rendered in this action for the $5,413.19 for which the appellee secured judgment in action No. 25077. Ordinarily such a rendition of a second judgment is improper. Shaw v. McKnight-Keaton Grocery Co.,
Affirmed.