Birch v. Funk

59 Ky. 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 23, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Ky. 544 (Birch v. Funk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birch v. Funk, 59 Ky. 544 (Ky. Ct. App. 1859).

Opinion

JUDGE DUVALL

delivered the otinion of the court:

These cases may be properly considered together.

In December, 1858, Theresa Birch, William Funk and Samuel Funk filed a petition against Peter Funk, alleging that in 1811 Jonathan Funk removed from Jefferson county, Kentucky, where he then resided, to the State of Louisiana; that he died in Louisiana possessed of'a large estate, consisting of a tract of land lying in Jefferson county, Kentucky, and of slaves and personal property in Louisiana; that he left two children, one of whom is the plaintiff, Theresa, the other a son named John, who afterwards died, leaving the plaintiffs, William and Samuel, his only heirs at law; that in January, 1813, the defendant, Peter Funk, was, by order of the Jefferson county court, appointed .guardian of Theresa and John Funk, both being then infants, and they being the only heirs of said Jonathan Funk; that they had learned, within the last year, the fact that their ancestor had died possessed of the estate mentioned; and that the defendant, their guardian, has taken possession of the same, and has kept the plaintiffs ignorant of these facts; that he filed no inventory of the estate which he received as their guardian, nor had he settled his accounts as such. They therefore prayed that the guardian be compelled to settle his accounts, and surrender to the plaintiffs the land and other property in his hands to which they were entitled.

To this petition the defendant demurred; the court sustained the demurrer, and the plaintiffs not asking leave or offering to amend, rendered a final judgment, dismissing the petition at the plaintiffs’ costs; and from that judgment the latter have appealed.

That the demurrer was properly sustained, admits, we think, of no serious question. The suit was not brought until after [546]*546the lapse of nearly forty-five years from the time the guardian was appointed, and not until at least twenty-five years after all the plaintiffs had arrived at full age. No disability, either of infancy or coverture, on the part of either of the plaintiffs, is alleged in the petition, nor do they even attempt to account for their delay in seeking to enforce their rights against their guardian, except by the general statement that they had not learned, until within a year past, that their ancestor died possessed of the property they now claim. The case, as presented by the petition, is one of gross and inexcusable laches; the demand is a stale and antiquated one, such as courts of equity may and should, upon well settled principles, refuse to act upon for the purpose of affording relief. This general doctrine is so well understood that further discussion, or the citation of authorities in support of it, would be out of place. It is sufficient to say that the plaintiffs wholly failed to show themselves entitled to any relief at the hands of the chancellor, and he did not, therefore, err in sustaining the demurrer upon the general ground that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

Subsequently to the rendition of this judgment, Theresa Birch filed her petition'against Peter Funk, in which William and Samuel Funk are also made defendants.' She alleges the death of her father, Jonathan Funk, in 1811, leaving heirs at law, and leaving lands and other estate as set forth in the former petition, and that Peter Funk was appointed her guardian. She, however, states the following additional and material facts: That she was eight years old at the time of her father’s death; that in the year 1814 she married John Birch, who died in the year 1856; that the defendant, Peter Funk, took possession of the land as guardian, and still has possession of the same; that he fraudulently kept the plaintiff in ignorance of the facts concerning the estate left by her father, and his reception of it as her guardian, with the intent to defraud her of her interest therein.

The defendant demurred to this petition, and also answered, setting up the judgment in the former suit as a bár to the present action, alleging that the former suit was for the same [547]*547property, and that the same matters were litigated in that suit which are sought to be litigated in this.

The case was heard upon the petition and answer, no disposition having been made of the demurrer, and judgment was rendered sustaining the defense set up in the answer, and dismissing the petition.

From that judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

That the facts as set forth in the petition are sufficient to constitute, a cause of action, and to entitle the appellant to relief, cannot be, and indeed has not been questioned, either by the chancellor in his opinion, or by the counsel in argument here. On the contrary, it is conceded that the defects in the former petition are supplied in the present petition, and that the additional allegations contained in the latter, which set forth the disabilities under which the plaintiff labored until the death of her husband in the year 1856, removed the only objection to the sufficiency of the former petition.

Was the judgment upon the demurrer to that petition a bar to the present action ? The rule is well settled, that to constitute the former judgment a bar to another suit, founded on the same cause of action, it must appear to have been a decision upon the merits. But if the trial went off on a technical defect, or because the debt was not due, or because the court had not jurisdiction, or because of the temporary disability of the plaintiff to sue, or the like, the judgment will be no bar to a future action. (1 Greenleaf, sec. 530.)

This principle has been repeatedly recognized and acted on by this court. In the case of Kendall vs. Talbott, (1 Marsh., 321,) it was held that a judgment rendered, for the defendants, on the ground of the insufficiency of the plaintiffs declaration, cannot be a bar to another action founded upon the same contract. See also Thomas, &c., vs. Hite, (5 B. Mon., 594.) The case of Hawkins vs. Lambert, &c., (18 B. Mon., 106,) does not at all conflict with this principle. In that case the fund which was the subject of the action belonged to the wife, who had sued for its recovery, and in the trial upon the merits of her claim she had recovered a portion of it. She and her husband united in a second suit for the recovery of the same identical claim which' [548]*548had been thus fully litigated in the former action, and it was held that the judgment in that action was a bar to the second suit, although in the latter case she undertook to maintain her right to the fund upon a different ground.

But the chancellor in his opinion, which is relied upon as part of the argument for the appellee, seems to recognize the principle we have stated; but he insists that the judgment pleaded as a bar to this action not only sustained the demurrer to the petition, but dismissed the petition itself; and as the order does not show upon what grounds the petition was dismissed, it could not be said that it was dismissed “ otherwise than upon the merits.”

Now it occurs to us that the order referred to does show very distinctly and certainly the ground upon which thepetition was dismissed. It is in these words : “ This cause having been heard on demurrer

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Related

Thomas v. Hite
44 Ky. 590 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1845)

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Bluebook (online)
59 Ky. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birch-v-funk-kyctapp-1859.