Burnes v. Simpson

9 Kan. 658
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 9 Kan. 658 (Burnes v. Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burnes v. Simpson, 9 Kan. 658 (kan 1872).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kingman, C. J.:

This action was brought in the district court of Douglas county on a judgment rendered by the district court of Leavenworth county. The court below sustained a demurrer to the petition. Several questions are presented.

I. Does such an action lie? It is conceded that such am action lies at common law. There is nothing in the code that [663]*663divests that right. In this case we have nothing to do with the question of costs. It may be, by analogy, drawn from some of the provisions of the code, that the creditor pursuing .such a course is not entitled to costs; but aside from that question none of the sections of the code referred to were intended to divest the creditor of the right to such an action. The proceeding seems harassing and vexatious, and to serve ■no purpose that could not be reached by a more simple and .less costly method. But these are reasons why the law should be changed, and not that it should be disregarded.- When the legislature makes the change this court will cheerfully enforce •the law. This question has been settled under codes similar ,to our own. Simpson v. Cochran, 23 Iowa, 81; Ames v. Hay, 12 Cal., 11.

;- II. It is insisted that it was necessary to aver personal service to show that the court had jurisdiction. The court that rendered the judgment was one of general jurisdiction, and in pleading the judgment of such a court it is not necessary to show the facts by which the court obtained jurisdiction. The usual and sufficient allegation is, that by the consideration of that court the plaintiff recovered the sum mentioned therein. Biddle v. Williams, 1 Pet., 686. Under our code, where the court that rendered the judgment is one of only limited and special jurisdiction, it is sufficient to aver that the judgment was duly rendered; § 121. The petition was not defective on this ground.

III. There was no copy of the judgment sued on attached to the petition. We think this was such an instrument as the code requires to be filed with the pleadings; but the .defect was one to be corrected on motion, not by demurrer. In states like Indiana, where the code makes the instrument or account on which the pleading is founded a part of the record, the not filing it may well be taken advantage of by demurrer; but in a code like ours such a practice is not logical, and ought not to be enforced.

IV. Was the action barred by the statute of limitations ? The judgment was rendered on the 4th of June 1859. This [664]*664action on said judgment was commenced on the 2d of Juné 1869, the intervening period being two days less than ten years. If the action was barred it must have been either by- § 20 of the code of 1859, Comp. Laws, 127, or by § 18 of the code of 1868, Gen. Stat., 633. The former of these was in force when the judgment was rendered, and so remained until its provisions were superseded by the Gen. Stat. in 1868. This section of the Comp. Laws bars actions not brought within three years “upon a specialty, or any agreement, contract or promise in writing.” The terms used have a signification broad enough to cover a judgment. They have also another meaning, and one in which they are more commonly used, which would not include a judgment. In what sense did the legislature use them? This inquiry presents' the only point on which the court has to pass, and we find no great difficulty in determining it. The word “contract” is some-1 times used in a sense that would make it embrace a j udgmeut; thus, .'Blackstone says, “ The last general species cif contractk which I ■ have to mention is that of debt.” The- learned author then classified debts as debts of record, debts by special, and debts by simple contract, and classes a judgment as a “debt of record,” which he calls “a contract of the"highest nature, being established by the sentence of a court of1 judicature.” 2 Bl. Com., 464, 465. Other writers treat the subject in the same way. Chitty on Cont., 2; Story on Cont., 2; Parsons on Cont., 7. In this sense a judgment is a contract, and is a contract by specialty. But the word is commonly used to express the agreement between two or more parties, for the doing or not doing of some particular thing; and we think the legislature used the word in this more restricted but more common signification. We do not rest this conclusion entirely upon the fact that such is the more common use of the word. The same legislature that passed this statute, on the day before this law was passed made another enactment amendatory thereto upon the subject of limitations of actions in certain cases, and in that used the word contract, and added to it judgments, thus showing" [665]*665that they used the word contract in its ordinary sense. It was not, in the legislative mind, comprehensive enough to embrace a judgment; therefore, a judgment was specially mentioned': Comp. Laws, 232, § 2. Again, the same statute that contains the limitation makes judgments a lien on lands, and continues this lien for five years, and as long thereafter as the judgment should be kept alive by the issue of executions, in proper times. To hold that judgments are embraced by the language of the section quoted, would place the law in the absurd -condition of proving that a judgment that is a lien upon the lands and tenements of the debtor, and can be enforced by execution, is barred by the statute of limitations. The law ought to be plain and unmistakable’to justify a construction leading to such a conclusion. We think it clear that the legislature used the word “contract” in its ordinary sense, and not as embracing judgments. Neither is the judgment covered by the word “specialty.” That word is used to describe one class of contracts, and in that class judgments aré -included. But the ordinary sense of the term is, that it means contracts under seal; and in that sense it does not includé judgments.- ' The observations made as to the word contract apply to this term with equal force. We are not left however to pur own judgment as to the meaning of this section of the law. • The exact point was decided in Tyler’s Ex’r v. Winslow, 15 Ohio St., 365. See also Todd v. Crum, 5 McLean, 172, and Dudley v. Lindsay, 9 B. Monroe; 486. The action not being barred by this statute it remains to be seen whether it is affected by the provisions of the Gen. Stat. Sec. 18 of the present code prescribes the limitation for all actions other than for the recovery of real estate, and after providing different limitations for various classes of cases, none of which by the terms used include judgments, in the sixth subdivision provides a general limitation of five years for all actions for relief - not thereinbefore provided for. In this category is the case before us. The-language of the section is plain, and its provisions are sweeping. If a right of action exists on a judgment,-and there is no other limitation provided for actions [666]*666upon judgments, then this section furnishes such limitation. The code of 1859 contained a similar clause, except-that the limitation was ten years. The ten years had not expired by two days when the action was commenced. The-whole of the five years prescribed by the law of 1868 had run before the enactment of the law. Sec. 7 of chap. 119 of .the Gen. Stat. does not apply to this case, if the limitation of' .1868 is to.be applied, but may be referred to to show that it was the intent of the legislature to give to the limitation laws-.a retrospective effect.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Kan. 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnes-v-simpson-kan-1872.