Ball v. Biggam
This text of 49 P. 678 (Ball v. Biggam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
There are but two questions in this case. The justness of the cause of action does not seem to be seriously disputed, but the Statute of Limitations is relied upon as a defense. The plaintiff relied upon section 23 of the Code to save him from the bar of the statute. He had brought an action before a justice of the peace for the same claim, and obtained [43]*43judgment. The defendant had appealed to the District Court, where the plaintiff again obtained judgment. Error was prosecuted in the Supreme Court, and the judgment reversed for the reason that the justice in the first instance had no jurisdiction of the case because the amount was in excess of his jurisdiction, and hence the appeal conferred none upon the District Court. For this reason the judgment was reversed with direction to the District Court to dismiss the case.
There was an action commenced, there was a judgment rendered, and that judgment was reversed at the instance of the plaintiff in error in this case ; this brings the case strictly within the very terms of the [44]*44statute. To paraphrase the language of Chief Justice Kingman in the case last cited, it is immaterial to this court why the judgment was reversed, and we will not inquire why it was reversed.
The case is also within the second provision of section 23. The action failed otherwise than upon its merits. It was dismissed. See Seaton v. Hixon, 35 Kan. 663; Hall v. Hurd, 40 id. 374. It was contended in the latter case that because there was no cause of action at the time the first action was begun, there was no action — no case. It will not do to say there was no case in the court, no action begun, no judgment, simply because the court of last resort held that there was no jurisdiction. Giving to the statute that construction to which it is entitled, it seems clear that the case comes within the provision of section 23, and that the pendency of that suit, even though the court had no jurisdiction of the cause of action, tolled the Statute of Limitations and brought it within the saving clause.
The judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
49 P. 678, 6 Kan. App. 42, 1897 Kan. App. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-biggam-kanctapp-1897.