Joyce-Pruit Co. v. Meadows

244 P. 889, 31 N.M. 336
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1925
DocketNo. 2872.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 244 P. 889 (Joyce-Pruit Co. v. Meadows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joyce-Pruit Co. v. Meadows, 244 P. 889, 31 N.M. 336 (N.M. 1925).

Opinions

OPINION OP THE COURT

BICKLEY, J.

The appellant (plaintiff) sued the cross-appellant (defendant) in the district court of Chavez county upon a promissory note evidencing a debt in the principal sum of $1,881.56. O. H. Smith, as executor of the will of J. A. Browning, deceased, was named as garnishee. The garnishee answered disclosing the fact that J'. A. Browning was the deceased father of defendant and that his will contained the following provision:

“After the payment of my debts and funeral expenses, I give to my daughter, Cordelia E. Meadows, one thousand dollars in cash.”

The defendant demurred to plaintiff’s complaint and the demurrer as sustained, and this cause was appealed to the Supreme Court of New Mexico, which reversed the lower court. See Joyce-Pruit Co. v. Meadows et al., 27 N. M. 529, 203 P. 537. The result of that suit is stated in the opinion of the court. It appeared that defendant demurred on the ground that the complaint showed on its face that the action was barred by the statute of limitations, and that the answers in the depositions which had been given by the defendant were not admissions sufficient to toll the statute or revive the cause of action. The Supreme Court held that a debt barred by the statute of limitations is revived by an admission that it is unpaid, in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, and that the fact that the admission is made in a deposition in answer to cross-interrogatories does not alter its effect.

The order of the Supreme Court was that the judgment of the district court be reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to overrule the demurrer. The trial court followed the instructions of the mandate, and the cause was reinstated on the docket. Thereafter O. E. Little, attorney for the defendant, filed his petition in intervention, upon which petition in intervention the court later gave him judgment against the garnishee for $500 of the funds garnished. After the cause was reinstated, the defendant (cross-appellant) filed an answer setting up, among other things, that the Joyce-P'ruit Company was estopped from relying upon the deposition which was a part of its complaint as a removal of the bar of the statute of limitations. The issues were made up on the pleadings and stipulations, of facts which were filed as to the controversy between the Joyce-Pruit Company and Cordelia Meadows and also as between Joyce-Pruit Company and the intervenor, O. E. Little. After considering the pleadings, stipulations of facts, and arguments of counsel, the court rendered a memorandum opinion whereby he authorized and afterwards entered judgment in favor of Joyce-Pruit Company against Cordelia Meadows upon the note sued upon less $500, for which Joyce-Pruit Company was given judgment against the garnishee, and also entered judgment in favor of the intervenor, O. E. Little, and against the garnishee for the sum of $500.

The controversy on appeal is, therefore, between Joyce-Pruit Company, appellant, and O. E. Little, intervenor, appellee, on the one hand, the appellant claiming that the district court erred in rendering judgment for the intervenor upon his petition in intervention. By the cross-appeal, the defendant below, Cordelia Meadows, claims that the district court erred in finding that the plaintiff was not estopped or precluded from setting up or pleading the acknowledge ment or admission set up in its complaint, to wit, the cross-interrogatories in the deposition of defendant and answers to them as a revival of .the debt here sued upon. The memorandum opinion of the district court, except as to immaterial matters omitted, is as follows :

“This suit has been to the Supreme Court on appeal from an order of the court sustaining a demurrer to the complaint and reversed by that court. Joyce-Pruit v. Meadows et al., 27 N. M. 529, 203 P. 537 A suit was originally brought on the same note and the defendants answered, pleading the statute of limitations. Joyce-Pruit Co. v. Meadows, No. 4728, this court. The result of that suit is stated in the opinion of the Supreme Court in the appealed case mentioned. Of course, the law, as laid down by the Supreme Court in this case is the law of the case and is binding upon this court.
“The defendants answer in this case by way of estoppel, contending, substantially, that the parties entered into a stipulation to take the depositions in question, agreeing that the answers to the interrogatories and cross-interrogatories might be read as evidence at the trial of said cause No. 4728, and nothing was provided in said stipulation for the use of said answers in any other way, and that by signing the same the parties represented to each other that the only use that could be made of them was as evidence in said original suit; that the representations so made on the part of plaintiff’s attorney were not in good faith; and that there was an ulterior intention in making the stipulation, it being his intention at the time to plead, as a revival of the debt there sued upon, the statement of defendants that the debt had not been paid, made in answer to cross-interrogatories in said deposition. There are other allegations, unnecessary to recite.
“The facts are stipulated in this case, and are substantially to the effect that after the taking of the depositions in the first suit, cause No. 4728, the same was dismissed, and thereafter, on the same date, the plaintiff filed this suit, and pleaded as a bar the answers to the cross-interrogatories mentioned, made by the defendants; and that in the original case the defendants were relying on the statute of limitations as a defense; that the plaintiff did not intend to use the answers to the cross-interrogatories in said cause No. 4728 at the time he crossed the depositions, but did so for the purpose of securing from the defendants an admissoin that would revive the debt sued on; that at said time plaintiff’s attorney intended, after securing such admission, to set up and rely upon it as a revival of the debt; that the defendant’s attorney was not advised of and did not know the purpose for which the cross-interrogatories were propounded, nor did he know the intention on the part of plaintiff’s attorney to use them as ■evidencie of the revival of the debt; that the defendant’s attorney signed the stipulation solely for the purpose of securing evidence to try said cause No. 4728; that said attorneys were of the opinion such cross-interrogatories were subject to objection and that such objection could be interposed at the trial if offered in evidence, and that had defendant’s. attorneys known the purpose for which the cross-interrogatories were propounded or the intention of the plaintiff to use the depositions for any other purpose than for evidence in the trial of cause No.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 889, 31 N.M. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joyce-pruit-co-v-meadows-nm-1925.