Merten v. San Angelo National Bank

49 P. 913, 5 Okla. 585
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 30, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 P. 913 (Merten v. San Angelo National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merten v. San Angelo National Bank, 49 P. 913, 5 Okla. 585 (Okla. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Tarsney, J.:

This is an action instituted in the district court of Logan county to recover on a promissory note, executed by the plaintiff in error, W. H. Merten, payable to the order of the defendant in error, the San Angelo National bank, dated at San Angelo, Texas, June 22, 1886, for $1,000. On September 3, 1888, the bank brought suit on this note in the district court of Tom Green County, in the state of Texas, and recovered *586 judgment on the note on November 16, 1888. The judgment was a personal judgment.

At the time of the commencement of said action in the state of Texas, the statutes of said state assumed to authorize the service of process by personal service of summons upon a defendant outside of the state of Texes. The defendant in that action was then residing at Wichita, in the state of Kansas. The only service of process in the action was that of serving the summons therein upon the defendant at Wichita, Kansas, and there was no attempt to have the defendant summoned by any constructive service.

On August 1, 1892, Merten, then being a resident of Logan county, Oklahoma Territory, the bank instituted a suit in the district court of said county on the judgment obtained in Texas. To the petition in that cause, the defendant answered in two paragraphs, as follows:

“First. That the action on the said pretended judgment was barred by the statute of limitations. Second. That the pretended judgment was rendered without process conferring jurisdiction, and void.”

Afterwards, on November 1, 1893, said court rendered judgment in said cause, as follows:

“Now on this first day of November, 1893, this cause coming on for trial in its regular order, pursuant to the assignment of causes on the calendar of the court, and the plaintiff appearing not in person nor by attorney, and the defendant appearing by Asp, Shartel & (Nottingham, his attorneys, who make application for judgment by default against the plaintiff, and -the court having examined this cause, finds that said plaintiff is in default of a reply to the matter of the defense contain in the first paragraph of the answer of said defendant; that said plaintiff has been duly ruled to reply and that such rule has long since expired. Therefore the court finds that the defendant is entitled to judgment. The plaintiff is *587 three times duly called and comes not. It is, therefore, considered, ordered and adjudged that the plaintiff take nothing by this action; that the said defendant, W. H. Mertin, have and recover of and from said plaintiff the costs of this action, taxed at $-.”

The fundamental propositions relied upon by the plaintiff in error in this cause are: (1) A note once placed in judgment is merged therein, and no further suit will lie thereon. In order for the plaintiff to maintain this action, it was necessary for him to impeach the existence of the judgments previously rendered. (2) A material proposition once litigated and established can never be reopened by the same parties in another suit. (8) The former adjudication that the original judgment was barred by the statute of limitations expressly affirmed its existence and proper original rendition; and (4), that the right to maintain the present action being dependent on the impeachment of the fundamental ground work of a former decision of the same court between the same parties, the evidence tending to impeach that judgment should have been excluded in the first instance and disregarded in the second and judgment should have gone for the defendant in the court below instead of the plaintiff.

It is conceded in argument by counsel that the statute of Texas assuming to authorize the personal service of process outside of the state, was invalid; that there was no service upon the defendant in the action in that state; that the court had no jurisdiction to render a personal judgment against the defendant; that the judgment was therefore a nullity and could not in any manner bind the defendant; that the cause of action sued on, namely, the note in question, was not merged in a valid judgment, but the contention is that, though the judgment was *588 void, the plea of the statute of limitations having been interposed by the defendant against it when the judgment was sued upon in this territory, such plea admitted the existence of the judgment and the plea being sustained by the court, it was an adjudication by the court of the existence of a judgment in which the note was merged; that by the admission of said plea that a judgment existed, defendant is estopped from now denying its existence and that the judgment of the court, upon tne plea of limitation, was an adjudication of the existence of a judgment against which the statute had run, and that such judgment is res judicata.

We are favored with an extensive and able argument, and by the citation of many authorities by counsel, showing the nature and effect at common law of a plea of the statute of limitations. We do not deem it necessary that we should make an analysis of the authorities or determine the accurate effect, the niceties, or the fictions of common law pleading, in order to determine the rights of the parties to this action. It is sufficient to say that we cannot concede the full force of the contention of counsel that the plea is an admission that the plaintiff once had a cause of action. At the common law, pleas in bar were not susceptible of any other division than.(l) pleas of traverse or denial, and (2) pleas by way of confession and avoidance. An important rule of pleading deducible from the principle that a plea in bar must traverse, or confess and avoid the matter to which it applied, was that a plea in confession and avoidance must give color, that is, that it must give the plaintiff credit for having an apparent or prima facie right of action, independently of the matter disclosed in the plea, to destroy it; (Tidd’s Practice, 552).

*589 Mr. Stevens, in liis work on pleadings, page 220, says:

“With respect to the quality of these pleadings, it is a rule that every pleading by way of confession and avoidance must give colour. This is a rule which it is very essential to understand in a view to a correct apprehension of the nature of these pleadings; yet it appears to have been not hitherto adequately explained or developed in the books of the science. Colour is a term of the ancient rhetoricians and was adopted at an early period into the language of pleadings. As a term of pleading it signifies an apparent or prima facie right, and the meaning of the rule that every pleading in confession or avoidance must give color, is that it must admit of an apparent right in the opposite party, and rely, therefore, on some new matter by which that apparent right is defeated.”

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Related

Bakas v. Casparis Stone Co.
14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 577 (Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 P. 913, 5 Okla. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merten-v-san-angelo-national-bank-okla-1897.