Cooper v. Condon

15 Kan. 572
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 15 Kan. 572 (Cooper v. Condon) 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
Cooper v. Condon, 15 Kan. 572 (kan 1875).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

This was an action brought by C. & G. Cooper & Co., .against C. M. Condon and various other persons, for the purpose of recovering a personal judgment against D. S. Wood and B. Edwards, for the amount of three promissory notes given by Wood and Edwards to the plaintiffs, and for the purpose of foreclosing a mortgage on certain real estate given by Wood and wife to the plaintiffs to secure the payment of said notes, and of having their (the plaintiffs’) lien on said real estate' declared prior to Condon’s lien, and to the liens of all the other defendants. The action was commenced in the district court of Labette county, on August 27th 1873. On November 7th following, the plaintiffs filed in said court a petition, affidavit, and a paper in the form of ¿ bond, for the purpose of removing the case from the district court of Labette county to the United States circuit court. The application was informal and insufficient, for reasons not necessary now to state. Even the plaintiffs themselves seem to have treated the application as insufficient; for afterward they filed a supplemental petition in the case, changing very [574]*574much their original cause of action, making two new parties, asked for and obtained a temporary injunction against one of these new parties, made motions in the case with regard to a certain fund which had just been created, filed a reply to an answer of one of said new parties, and on March 7th, 1874, filed a new affidavit and a new bond for the removal of the case to the United States circuit court. The hearing of the application for said removal was then postponed until the 20th of said March. Before that day, and oh the 9th of said March, the defendant Condon took judgment against the plaintiffs in their absence, and without any notice to them or their attorneys. Of course, the court below erred in permitting Condon to do this; and it now remains to be seen whether the error was material and substantial. Said judgment in effect was, that Condon’s lien on said real estate was prior to that of the plaintiffs. On March 20th said application for removal was overruled, and we think rightly so. There were several irregularities in the application. For instance, the plaintiffs did not “make and file” the kind of affidavit required by law. They made the application under the act of Congress of May 2d 1867; (14 U. S. S’tat. at Large, 559.) That act authorizes the removal of a case by the plaintiff from a state court into the United States circuit court only where “ he will make and file, in such state court, an affidavit stating that he has reason to and does believe that, from prejudice or local interest, he will not be able to obtain justice in such state court.” In the present case the affidavit was made and filed by one L. W. K., who says in his affidavit that he is “the attorney and agent of the plaintiffs;” that he himself, (not the plaintiffs, nor either of them,) “ has reason to and does believe that from prejudice and local influence the said plaintiffs will not be able to obtain justice in the state court.” He does not state, nor is it anywhere shown, why the plaintiffs, or some' one of them, did not make the affidavit; nor is it shown whether they have any reason to believe or do believe that they could not obtain justice in such state court. The affidavit shows that it is the attorney and agent [575]*575of the plaintiffs who has reason to and does believe this. There is no authority given in the statute for a plaintiff to. swear by his attorney or agent; nor is there any authority given for his attorney or agent to “make and file” the affidavit. Nor under the statute is the attorney’s or agent’s belief material. We do not know that there ever has been any direct adjudication upon this exact question now under consideration by any court of last resort. It was once however decided by Judges Dillon and Dundy of the United States circuit court, that the plaintiff’s attorney could not make the affidavit. (Sands v. Smith, 1 Dillon, 298, note. See also, Dodge v. N. W. U. Packet Co., 13 Minn. 458.) We do not think that the affidavit in this case was sufficient. And we do not think that the state courts are bound to resort to extraordinarily liberal construction for the purpose of ousting themselves of the jurisdiction of cases.

After, said application for removal was overruled, the plaintiffs moved the court to vacate and set aside the judgment rendered on March 9th in favor of Condon. This motion was overruled on April 4th. Said judgment, as we have already stated, was merely that Condon’s lien on the premises in controversy was prior to the plaintiffs’ lien. No other or different judgment could have been rendered upon the pleadings in the case. Condon set up in his answer new matter, showing that his lien was prior to that of the plaintiffs; and the plaintiffs did not file any reply thereto, controverting the allegations of said answer. Hence the answer setting up new matter must be taken as true. (Civil Code, § 128.) And hence, if the plaintiffs’ motion had been sustained, and the judgment set aside and vacated, the court would have been bound to again render the same judgment upon the pleadings, unless the plaintiffs could have got leave to file a reply. The plaintiffs were in default for want of a reply when the judgment was rendered, and they gave no reason to the court for their default, except that they had thought that they had filed a reply. They did not, when they made their motion, nor at any other time, offer to file a [576]*576reply, or ask leave of the court to file a reply. They stated that they had a defense to Condon's answer, and that the answer was a sham; but they did not state what their defense was, nor why nor how Condon's answer was a sham. They did not deny the truth of the facts alleged in the answer; and a great many of them were unquestionably true. If said judgment had never been rendered; if the application of the plaintiffs had been made for leave to file a reply, instead of to vacate said judgment; and if they had made no further, or better showing than they did on this application, the court would not have erred in refusing to grant them leave to file a reply, or at most it would not have committed an error sufficient to authorize a reversal of its rulings. When the plaintiffs moved to set aside said judgment, they should have shown what their defense to said answer was, what portions (if any) of the answer they controverted, why they were in default, and should have offered to file a reply upon the condition that the judgment were set aside. For, as the pleadings then were, if the court had granted their motion to vacate the judgment, the court would then immediately have rendered the same judgment upon the pleadings. On the same day that this motion was overruled, (but whether before, or after, is not shown,) the action as between the plaintiffs and the other defendants was tried. And on this trial it was shown that, even if the plaintiffs had filed a reply, and tried their case as between themselves and Con-don, the same judgment should have been l’endered. In any manner in which we may view the case, we do not think that the error of the district court in rendering the Condon judgment at the time it did was or is now such a material error as will require a reversal of the judgment. On the said trial between the plaintiffs and the other defendants the plaintiffs obtained the personal judgment against Wood and Edwards which'they prayed for in their petition. They also obtained judgment against all the defendants, except Condon, Doty, and Avise &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Kan. 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-condon-kan-1875.