Hopkins v. Cothran

17 Kan. 173
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 17 Kan. 173 (Hopkins v. Cothran) 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
Hopkins v. Cothran, 17 Kan. 173 (kan 1876).

Opinion

FIRST OPINION.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

About the only thing complained of in this case is, that the court below did not give sufficient attention to the amended answer of the defendants below, plaintiffs in error. Now when this amended answer was filed the case stood upon petition, answer, and reply, and the time for filing an answer had long previously passed. The amended answer appears to have been filed out of time, without leave of the [175]*175court or judge, and without the consent of the plaintiff. It was therefore proper for said court and judge to treat said amended answer as a nullity. (Luke v. Johnnycake, 9 Kas. 511.) We think no error was committed by the court below. Certainly none is shown by the record brought to this court.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

All the Justices concurring.

SECOND OPINION.

It seems that after this case had been brought to this court the plaintiffs in error discovered that the record of the proceedings of the court below (a_ copy of which they filed with their petition in error in this court,) did not show that they had any right or authority to file their said amended answer in the court below. They therefore applied to the court below, and on their motion obtained an order from that court directing an entry nune pro tune of an order showing that they had obtained leave of the court below to file said amended answer at the time they in fact did file it. They then brought a copy of said nune pro tune entry to this court, and moved this court for leave to amend their original transcript by incorporating this nune pro time entry into it and making it a part thereof. This motion was taken under advisement by the court. The parties then submitted the .entire case to the court for decision on its merits, and the court took the whole case under advisement. Afterward, when the court came to consider the case it entirely overlooked the motion of the plaintiffs in error to amend their original transcript, and considered the case without examining said nune pro tune entry. We shall now reconsider the case, and shall consider it as though said nune pro time entry were in fact incorporated into the original transcript and- constituted a part thereof. And therefore we shall consider the case as though the plaintiffs in error, defendants below, had full authority to file their said amended answer at the time they filed it. And taking this view of the case, did the court below commit any error? The petition showed [176]*176that the note and mortgage were executed for the sum of $4,200, with interest at the rate of 12 per cent, per annum, and a stipulation for $400 as attorney-fees in case of foreclosure. The amended answer admitted the execution of the note and mortgage as alleged in the petition, but it alleged that $275 of the said sum of $4,200 was for usurious interest. This was the only new matter alleged in the amended answer, and therefore» the only matter alleged therein that needed a reply to put it in issue. No reply was however filed to the amended answer. After said amended answer was filed the defendants below moved the court for judgment upon the pleadings; but upon what grounds this motion was made, is not shown. . It could not have been made upon the ground however that no reply was filed to said amended answer; for, ignoring everything but the petition and amended answer, and upon these pleadings alone the defendants were not entitled to judgment, but on the contrary the plaintiff below was entitled to a judgment for $3,925 principal, with interest, and $400 attorney-fees, and costs, and for a sale of the mortgaged property, etc. It will be remembered that the original answer was replied to. Said motion was overruled, and no exception was taken thereto. The case was then submitted to a jury for trial. What the evidence was we cannot tell, for none of it seems to have been preserved, and no question seems to have been raised upon its introduction. From the instructions however, given and refused, and the defendants’ motion for a new trial, we would infer that the sole question litigated before the jury was whether the defendants received $3,925, or $4,000, as the consideration for their said note and mortgage. The sole contest before "the jury seems to have been whether $75 of the amount included in said note.and mortgage was for usurious interest or not. Now this question could be raised before the jury only by the said amended answer, and a supposed reply thereto. No other pleadings raised it. The amended answer set forth that $275 of the amount included in the said note and mortgage was for usurious interest. But it would seem that on the trial plaintiff [177]*177admitted that $200 of that amount was for usurious interest, and therefore contested with the defendant only as to whether the other $75 of that amount was for usurious interest. The court instructed the jury among other things as follows:

“The plaintiff claims the consideration to have been.$4,000. The defendants claim that it was $3,925. The only question for you to decide is, how much did defendants receive as the consideration for said note ? When you decide that from the evidence, you will find your verdict for the plaintiff for that amount, with interest from the date of the note at the rate of 12 per cent, per annum, to which you will add the sum of $400 as attorney-fees, and find that the plaintiff has a lien on the land for that amount.”

No exception was taken to this instruction, nor indeed to any instruction given by the court. And the record does not affirmatively show that all the instructions given have been brought to this court. The defendants asked to have certain instructions given. These instructions show beyond all question that the defendants considered that all the allegations of their amended answer were in issue. These instructions were refused, and the defendants excepted. This is the first exception taken by the defendants below, plaintiffs in error. Whether these instructions should have been 'given or not, we can hardly tell. We are inclined to think that the substance of them, as far as they stated the law of the case, was embodied in the instructions already given. But further than this: none of the evidence in the case is brought to this court. (Ed. Assoc. v. Hitchcock, 4 Kas. 36; Auld v. Kimberlin, 7 Kas. 601; Leroy v. McConnell, 8 Kas. 273; The State v. Herold, 9 Kas. 200.) And we are not informed affirmatively that all the instructions given are contained in the record. So far as we have the means of determining, we should think that the court below did not err in refusing said instructions.

The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for $5,026.66. This sum is composed of $4,000 received by the defendants as the consideration for said note and mortgage, $626.66 interest [178]*178thereon, and $400 attorney-fees. This sum is just $75, with interest thereon, more than the defendants virtually admitted to be due to the plaintiff by their pleadings.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Kan. 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-cothran-kan-1876.