Hawkins v. Brown

97 P. 479, 78 Kan. 284, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 6, 1908
DocketNo. 15,506
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 97 P. 479 (Hawkins v. Brown) 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
Hawkins v. Brown, 97 P. 479, 78 Kan. 284, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 52 (kan 1908).

Opinion

[285]*285The opinion of the court was delivered by

Benson, J.:

The record in this case requires a consideration of the statute of limitations and several questions of practice. A motion to dismiss the proceeding here because of the omission from the case-made of one of several orders extending the time to make and serve it is denied, the plaintiff in error having supplied a certified copy of the order. The error assigned upon the orders overruling the demurrers to the amended petition can not be considered, more than one year having elapsed after the orders were made before the record was filed in this court. (Railway Co. v. Murphy, 75 Kan. 707, 90 Pac. 290.) The alleged error in denying the motion for an order requiring the plaintiff to make his reply more definite and certain can not be reviewed, because the reply was amended and the amended reply, which was held sufficient, is not contained in the record. The rulings of the court in receiving testimony of which the defendants complain can not be considered because the record does not contain the motion for a new trial, if any was filed.

Defendant Hawkins was the maker of, and defendants J. S. and C. D. Moots were indorsers upon, two promissory notes, the subject of the action. Service was made upon Hawkins in Rice county, where the action was brought, and on the other two defendants in Haskell county. These two moved for a dismissal of the action upon the ground that the district court of Rice county had no jurisdiction of the subject of the action or the persons of the defendants named. The point urged for such dismissal was that upon the face of the petition it appeared that the action was commenced more than five years after the notes fell due, that the causes of action thereon against Hawkins were barred by limitation, and, as there was no right to recover against him, the indorsers had been improperly joined. This motion was denied. In all subsequent [286]*286pleadings J. S. and C. D. Moots included this objection or plea to the jurisdiction upon the same grounds. The merits of this defense will be further referred to. The action having been commenced more than five years, after the maturity of the notes, the plaintiff in his amended petition sought to avoid the apparent bar by pleading the pendency of certain actions in the Haskell county district court, wherein, it was alleged, these notes had been impounded and held in custodia legis for over five years. It was not claimed that Hawkins was a party in such actions, or in privity with any party thereto, but it was alleged that the other defendants had entered into a conspiracy with the plaintiff in one of the actions to keep the notes in litigation until the bar of the statute should fall.

Defendant Hawkins, after the demurrers to this petition were overruled, answered, affirmatively pleading the five-year limitation, to which the plaintiff replied by restating the proceedings in the other action pleaded in his petition, and also pleading certain written acknowledgments of the indebtedness in further avoidance of the apparent statutory bar. Defendants, J. S. and C. D. Moots also pleaded the limitation of the action against Hawkins with-their plea to the jurisdiction before referred to. On the trial the plaintiff introduced transcripts of the proceedings in the other actions set out in his petition, and also offered evidence tending to show that about two years after the notes became due Hawkins, the maker, had conveyed to J. S. and C. D. Moots a tract of land, upon their agreement to procure and surrender to him the notes, which were then held under the orders of the court in the cases referred to. The deed of conveyance was in the ordinary form, making no reference to the notes. To prove the acknowledgment of indebtedness, in order to avoid the apparent bar of the statute, the plaintiff read letters, written and signed by Hawkins and addressed to the plaintiff, referring to this transaction, in answer tO' [287]*287inquiries made by him concerning these notes. In one of these letters he said:

“In regard to the note or notes I give Moots Brothers —was for land, and I failed on two crops of wheat; I expected to make money that way to make the payments on the land, and when I failed twice I turned it back to them; they promised to give me back the notes, but never done it; I was careless and that is how it is about the Moots Brothers notes. ... I am willing to pay all my just debts, but not able to pay them twice; I want to do the fair thing, too; don’t want to beat you out of your just rights, neither be done up myself.”

In another letter he wrote:

“I can’t find any letters from any one, but I know that Moots promised to send me the note whenever the notes got in shape that he could get them, and I had forgotten all about them until you begun to write me.”

These writings, shown by other testimony to- relate to the notes in suit, sufficiently acknowledge an indebtedness at one time, but do -not acknowledge a subsisting liability. On the contrary they- allege a payment, and, by implication, deny further liability. The statute provides. that an acknowledgment of an existing liability, debt or claim, in writing, signed by the party to be charged, shall remove the bar. (Civ. Code, § 24.) Construing this statute, this, court has held that this acknowledgment must be an admission of a present, subsisting debt. (Hanson v. Towle, Adm’r, 19 Kan. 273.) It is true that in Elder v. Dyer, 26 Kan. 604, 40 Am. Rep. 320, some expressions in the opinion in Hanson v. Towle, Adm’r, supra, were limited, but the' rule just stated was- not restricted, and in Haythorn v. Cooper, 65 Kan. 338, 69 Pac. 333, the decision in Hanson v. Towle, Adm’r, was reaffirmed, reiterating that there must be “an unqualified and direct admission of a present, subsisting debt on which the party is liable.” (Page 340; Hanson v. Towle, Adm’r, 19 Kan. 273.) [288]*288Measured by this rule the letters were insufficient to remove the bar of the statute.

The proceedings in the district court of Haskell county did not affect the rights of defendant Hawkins, for he was a stranger thereto. It can not be that the inconvenience or the practical difficulty of bringing an action upon a promissory note, because it is involved for the time in litigation in an action between other parties, can suspend the operation of the statute of limitations on such instrument against a person who is in no way responsible for, involved in, or connected with, the litigation. So to hold would be to read into the statute a proviso or condition not placed there by the lawmakers. In reaching this conclusion we have considered the proceedings in the actions referred to as they are pleaded in the amended petition, the transcripts not being included in the case-made. The effect of this omission, and whether we can review the judgment at all, will now be considered.

The plaintiff contends that because these transcripts are not in the record this court can not review the judgment overruling the demurrer to the evidence. As a general rule it is true that when material items of evidence are omitted from the record this court can not review a judgment rendered upon a demurrer to the evidence. (Kansas City v. Parker, 65 Kan. 734, 70 Pac.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Boucher v. Steffes
Montana Supreme Court, 1972
First National Bank of Topeka v. United Telephone Ass'n
353 P.2d 963 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1960)
Golden Rule Oil Co. v. Liebst
109 P.2d 95 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1941)
Voelker v. Broadview Hotel Co.
81 P.2d 36 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1938)
Updegrove v. Cooper
78 P.2d 843 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1938)
Gunnoe v. West Virginia Poultry Co-Operative Ass'n
174 S.E. 691 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1934)
Salt Lake Transfer Co. v. Shurtliff
30 P.2d 733 (Utah Supreme Court, 1934)
Wichita Sanitarium v. Bierschbach
12 P.2d 806 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1932)
Harbaugh v. Herr
289 P. 957 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1930)
Masemore v. McCrary
278 P. 705 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1929)
Van Buren v. Pratt
256 P. 1006 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1927)
King v. Ingels
250 P. 306 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1926)
Macksville State Bank v. Ehrlich
241 P. 462 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1925)
Lindholm v. Heithecker
213 P. 671 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1923)
Slimmer v. Rice
160 P. 984 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1916)
O'Donnell v. Parker
160 P. 1192 (Utah Supreme Court, 1916)
Corbett v. Hoss
157 P. 1195 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1916)
Tucker v. Tucker
154 P. 269 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1916)
Hamilton v. Beaubien
142 P. 245 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 P. 479, 78 Kan. 284, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-brown-kan-1908.