Green v. Williams

21 Kan. 64
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 21 Kan. 64 (Green v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Williams, 21 Kan. 64 (Ark. 1878).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

It is often more difficult for this court to ascertain from the record of a case what questions are presented for consideration, than it is to decide the questions involved in the case after they are ascertained. This is particularly true in this case. The court' below, to whom the case was submitted without a jury, found generally for the defendant and rendered judgment accordingly; but what the opinion of the court was upon the various legal questions involved in the case, we are at a loss to know. The plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, complains of this .mode of making findings. He says: “The court found for the defendant, but from some cause the judge has declined to permit the record to show the grounds or points on which the plaintiff failed.” Now the court below or judge did not decline to do any such thing. The court below by finding generally, did just what it has been- the custom for courts to do, ever since courts were instituted, except where the court is asked to find specially. And the court also found just as the statutes authorized it to find. Section 290 of the code reads as follows:

“Upon the trial of questions of fact by the court, it shall not be necessary for the court to state its findings, except generally, for the plaintiff or defendant, unless one of the parties request it, with the view of excepting to the decision of the court upon the questions of law involved in the trial; in which case the court shall state in writing the conclusions of fact found, separately from the conclusions of law.” (Gen. Stat. 684.)

• Smustbeisk?a No request was made in this case that the court should find otherwise than generally. The court undoubtedly would have found specially, and would have stated its conclusions of law separately from its findings of fact, if even the slightest intimation had been given that such a thing was desirable; but no such intimation was given, and therefore the court found generally, as all courts do in such cases. If special findings had been made, and if the conclusions of law had been stated separately from the findings of fact, then this case could have been presented to this court in something like an intelligent and intelligible manner. Then we could know wherein “the plaintiff failed.” Then we could know what the views of the court below were upon the various questions of law involved in the case; and we could know these things fully as well as we could if the case had been tried by a jury, and written instructions given by the court to the jury, and such instructions brought to this court. But taking the case as it is, and as it has been brought to this court, we shall have to grope our way as best we can. We have the pleadings and evidence before us, and we shall endeavor to decide all such questions as are fairly presented by them, and which were fairly raised in the court below, and saved by the plaintiff. And here we might say, that the plaintiff made a motion for a new trial upon nearly all the statutory grounds, which motion was overruled, and the plaintiff duly excepted. By this means the plaintiff saved some questions which would otherwise have been lost to.him.

The facts of the case, so far as it is necessary to state them, seem to be substantially as follows: In 1865, Theodore Jones and Jacob McMurtry owned forty-eight head of horses, which they had bought in Kansas to take to Illinois to sell. There is no evidence that their partnership extended to anything beyond this single transaction, and all the evidence bearing upon the subject would seem to indicate that they were equal partners. While the horses were in Kansas, General G. M. Dodge and others took them away from Jones and McMurtry, and Jones and McMurtry neyer obtained possession of .them again. Afterward, but iu 1865,-Jones and McMurtry commenced an action in Kansas against Dodge and others for the damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the •loss of said horses. Afterward, but also in 1865, Jones left Kansas and went to Illinois, where he resided until in 1875, when he died. McMurtry remained in Kansas, where he resided until in 1876, when he died. The witness H. T. Green testified, among other things, “that Jones left Kansas in 1865; that McMurtry agreed with Jones to remain in Kansas and act for him in all matters, and attend to the collection of the money for the horses owned by them and in suit;” and there was no evidence in conflict with this testimony of Green. McMurtry attended to said suit, and on September 28, 1868, judgment was rendered therein in favor of Jones and McMurtry, and against Dodge and others, for $2,928. Several ineffectual attempts were then made' to collect this judgment, and the parties had about come to the conclusion that it was worthless; but in 1870, McMurtry, ascertaining that Dodge, who then resided in Iowa, was solvent, commenced another action against Dodge, in. Iowa, on the said judgment rendered in Kansas. Soon afterward, and on December 3,1870, Dodge settled the entire matter, by paying to McMurtry $3,400, the amount of said judgment with interest and all costs. McMurtry gave to Dodge a receipt for the money,-to which receipt he signed his own name, “Jacob P. McMurtry,” and also the name of “Theodore Jones.” McMurtry never informed Jones that he had collected or received said money, and Jones did not know anything about it until in 1874, and he made no" demand therefor, or for any part thereof, until May 25,1875. This suit was commenced June 24, 1875, for $1,200, which it is alleged in the petition is one-half of the whole amount received by McMurtry after paying all expenses.

From the foregoing facts it would seem that the plaintiff ought to recover; but the defendant says not, and in his brief gives two reasons therefor: 1. He says that Jones and McMurtry were partners; that they never had any settlement of their partnership affairs, and that therefore neither Jones nor his administrator could maintain any action against McMurtry or his administrator,.except an action for an accounting; and he claims that this is not that kind of action. 2. And he also claims that the statute of limitations has barred all right of action that ever existed in favor of Jones or his administrator against McMurtry or his administrator.

I. We do not think that the first reason given by the defendant, why the plaintiff cannot recover in this action, is sufficient. 1. Jones and McMurtry did have a settlement of their partnership affairs, as was testified to by McMurtry himself, and this settlement was made after the action of Jones and McMurtry against Dodge and others was commenced. 2. The whole partnership consisted merely in the purchase and ownership of said horses, and the prosecution of said suit against Dodge and others; and the petition sufficiently alleged all the facts connected therewith, so as to make the suit substantially an action for an accounting, if it were necessary that the action should be in that form. 3. And if the petition were defective in any of its statements, and only defective, it might have been amended, as requested by the plaintiff at the close of the trial, so as to make it correspond with the facts proved. We suppose it is not claimed that the partnership still existed at the time that this suit was commenced, for at that time Jones was dead, and the action was brought by his administrator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Kan. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-williams-ark-1878.