Gille v. Emmons

59 P. 338, 61 Kan. 217, 1899 Kan. LEXIS 28
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1899
DocketNo. 11,342
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 59 P. 338 (Gille v. Emmons) 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
Gille v. Emmons, 59 P. 338, 61 Kan. 217, 1899 Kan. LEXIS 28 (kan 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Doster, C. J.;

This was an action on a supersedeas bond given by the defendant in error, Oarrie L. [218]*218Emmons, to the plaintiff in error, James M. Gille, to stay execution on a judgment rendered in a mortgage foreclosure proceeding. The controversy between the parties has assumed various phases and has been productive of much litigation in this and other courts. March 25, 1889, the district court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in error, James M.Gille, against the defendant in error, Carrie L. Emmons, and her husband, D. R. Emmons, for the amount due on two promissory notes and for the foreclosure of a mortgage given to secure them. The Emmonses prosecuted error to this court, which affirmed the judgment of the court below. (Emmons v. Gille, 51 Kan. 178, 32 Pac. 916.) Subsequently Mrs. Emmons filed a motion in the district court to vacate the judgment for money rendered against her, for the reasons that she had not signed the promissory notes upon which the judgment had been rendered, nor had the petition against her in the foreclosure action alleged her liability upon them, wherefore, the judgment was void. This motion was sustained, and from the order sustaining it James M. Gille prosecuted error to this court. The decision of the lower court was affirmed. (Gille v. Emmons, 58 Kan. 118, 48 Pac. 569.) For the purpo se of staying execution upon the money judgment of March 25, 1889, the present defendant in error, Carrie L. Emmons, together with others, executed a bond in the following language :

“In the district court of the tenth judicial district of the state of Kansas, sitting in and for the county of Johnson.
Jambs M. Gille, Plaintiff,
v.
D. R. Emmons, Carrie L. Emmons, George E. Hunter, and W. S. Beard, Defendants.

“Know All Men by These Presents, That we, D. R. Emmons, Carrie L. Emmons, George E. Hunter, and W. S. Beard, as principals, and W. H. Ryus and James D. Husted, as sureties, acknowl[219]*219edge ourselves to owe and be indebted to James M. Gille in the sum of twenty thousand and four hundred dollars ($20,400), for the well and faithful payment of which we bind ourselves, our heirs, executors- and administrators firmly by these presents.

“ The condition of the above obligation is such, that whereas, by the finding of the above-entitled court, the plaintiff, James M. Gille, did heretofore recover judgment against the above-named D. E. Emmons, Carrie L. Emmons, George E. Hunter and W. S. Beard for the sum of $10,188, together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, and costs of suit, taxed at $20 ;

“And whereas, the above-named D. E. Emmons, Carrie L. Emmons, George E. Hunter and W. S. Beard have heretofore filed in the office of the supreme court their petition in error with case-made attached thereto, whereby they ask a reversal of the judgment so as aforesaid rendered against them, which said cause is now pending in said court:

“Now, if the said above-bound D. E. Emmons, Carrie L. Emmons, George E. Hunter and E. S. Beard shall pay or cause to be paid to the said James M. Gille the condemnation money so recovered by said judgment, together with costs, in case the said judgment of this court shall be affirmed in whole or in part, then this obligation shall be null and void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

No execution was issued in the case until after the affirmance of the judgment in 51 Kan., supra. Execution was then issued and the mortgaged property sold. A deficiency of the judgment remained, to compel the payment of which action on the supersedeas bond was commenced. The case was not tried until after the affirmance by this court, in 58 Kan., supra, of the order of the district court vacating the judgment for money against Mrs. Emmons. It was then tried and judgment rendered in her favor, from which judgment the plaintiff, Gille, has prosecuted error to this-court.

[220]*220It will be most convenient to state, and determine in the order in which stated, the objections of the defendant in error to her liability upon the bond. She first claimed that there was not sufficient evidence identifying the bond as the one given in the case in which she had prosecuted error, and the decision of which is reported in 51 Kan., supra. The only evidence in direct proof of identity received upon the trial was the mandate of affirmance issued out of this court. This, we think, contained recitals and correspondence in names of parties to those signing the bond sufficient to establish prima facie the identity of the action in which the bond was given with the one decided by this court.

It is next claimed that the proceeding in error taken by Mrs. Emmons to this court which resulted in an affirmance of the judgment against her, as reported in 51 Kan., supra, was void, because this court had no jurisdiction to entertain such proceeding in error, and consequently that the bond given by her to stay execution from the lower court, pending the void proceeding in this court, was likewise void. The claimed reason for this is that the evidence taken in the court below and incorporated into the record brought to this court in the present case shows that the petition in error and record in the former case were not filed here within one year after the judgment of the lower court. The evidence in the record now before us shows that the money and foreclosure judgment on which the former proceeding in error was prosecuted was rendered March 25, 1889, while the petition in error on that judgment was not filed in this court until April 3, 1890.

Passing by the question whether a litigant can invoke the jurisdiction of this court to a final conclusion [221]*221upon the claims of error presented, and afterward, in a controversy with the same party as to his liability on a bond given to stay execution pending the prosecution of the proceedings in error, be heard to say that this court was without jurisdiction to entertain such proceedings, it is a sufficient answer to defendant in error to say that the burden of proof of facts which would show lack of jurisdiction in this court in the former case rested upon her, and that she failed to discharge the burden. The presumption is that we had jurisdiction in the former case. That presumption could only be dispelled by the introduction in evidence of the full record of the former case. The full record was not introduced. The record as introduced stopped with the judgment of March 25, 1889. Whether a motion for new trial was filed in that case we do not know, so far as anything in the record now before us shows. Proceedings in error are taken from final orders and from orders overruling motions for new trials. If a motion for a new trial had been filed and overruled in the former case, the statute of limitations on a proceeding in error to this court would have commenced to run from the overruling of the motion for new trial. For aught we know from the record in the present case a motion for new trial in the former case may have been made and overruled less than one year preceding the time of the filing of the petition in error in this court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P. 338, 61 Kan. 217, 1899 Kan. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gille-v-emmons-kan-1899.