Robey & Robey v. Knowlton
This text of 23 Iowa 544 (Robey & Robey v. Knowlton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[545]*545
Upon these facts the question is, whether the court should have found, in the language of the statute, that, from the testimony of defendant, it affirmatively appears that “the cause of action still justly subsists.” Eev. § 2742. It will be seen that the statute requires that the cause of action shall appear to still justly subsist from the defendants testimony, and that this shall be thus shown affirmatively. And, therefore, however strong and conclusive may be the other testimony, it will not avail unless the court can say that the case is taken out of the statute affirmatively by his oath.
And, if his testimony leaves the case so that the court cannot say affirmatively that a cause of action ever did exist, plaintiff fails as necessarily and as logically as though [546]*546it once had a valid existence, and it does not, in like manner, appear that it is still a subsisting indebtedness. For the theory of the provision is, that, while the statute operates to bar the recovery, it is but right and proper to submit the matter to defendant’s oath. And if, from this, it affirmatively appears, that plaintiffs’ claim, originally valid, still justly subsists, the defendant ought not to complain. Or, in other words, the object is to protect parties against stale and unjust demands, and there is no danger that a party will suffer unjustly from a demand which, upon his oath, he directly admits to still subsist against him. Porter v. McKenzie, 20 Iowa, 462.
But it must thus appear. And satisfied, as we are, that this testimony does not make such an admission, we feel constrained to hold, that this judgment must be affirmed.
If the former, and we cannot presume to the contrary, then, of course, there could be no recovery. For aught we can know, the money was the value of her dower right, belonging to her after the sale of the estate, and in consideration of her release of the same in her own right. [547]*547But, however this may be, and though, but for the statute, plaintiffs might, under the testimony, be entitled to recover (a matter even then of much doubt), the case made falls so far short of showing affirmatively a justly subsisting cause of action, that we cannot interfere with the judgment below. See the case above cited and referred to, and the authorities there cited.
Affirmed.
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