Smith v. Burnes

8 Kan. 197
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 Kan. 197 (Smith v. Burnes) 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
Smith v. Burnes, 8 Kan. 197 (kan 1871).

Opinion

The ojfinion of the court was delivered by

Yaeentine, J.:

In this case a judgment was rendered in favor of John B. Burnes, defendant in error and plaintiff below, and against William L. Smith, one of the plaintiffs in error, for the sum of $824, and an order was made against all the defendants below that Lot No. 12, in Block 39, in Leavenworth City, should be sold, without any right of redemption, to satisfy said judgment. The judgment was rendered on four promissory notes, the first three of which were given by William L. Smith to John B. Burnes, and the last was given by William L. Smith to Lewis Burnes. The first note was given November 8th, 1865, and the amount found due upon it was $400. The second note was given December 23d, 1865, and the amount found due ujjon it was $250. The third note was given August 18,1866, and the amount found due upon it was $40. The fourth note was given May 13, 1867, and the amount found due upon it was $134. Each of these notes was secured by a separate mortgage on said lot, each mortgage bearing even date with the note it was given to secure. At the time the last note and mortgage were given William L. Smith and his wife Mary Jane Smith waived the right of redemption under the provisions of the statute of 1867, which had then just then come into force, and which permitted them to do so. (Laws of 1867, p. 188.) Afterwards Lewis Burnes transferred this note and mortgage to John B. Burnes, the plaintiff below, who brought his action on this note and mortgage as well as on the three notes and mortgages that had [201]*201been given to himself. There was no waiver of redemption in the notes and mortgages given to him. After the judgment and decree of the court below, an order of sale was issued, and said lot was sold thereon, and afterwards the sale was confirmed by the court and a deed was ordered to be made to the purchaser. After all of these proceedings had transpired in the court below, the plaintiff in error brought the case to this court, and now asks to have the whole of said proceedings reversed.

l. Pleading; statement, ow eme . I. It is claimed here, and for the first time, that the petition below does not and did not state facts sufficient to authorize the court to make any order or decree as the court did, that the lot should be sold without any right of redemption. It is possible that if the objection to the p^p.^ pee:a made before the verdict of the 'jury, or before the decision of the court below, the objection should have been sustained. "We think that the statement in the petition was defective, and should have been held so, if it had been attacked at the proper time, and in the proper manner. But the objection now comes too late. The petition was not defective because it failed to state some material fact, but it was defective because it stated a material fact in a defective manner. It simply stated that “ the privilege of redemption had been waived” by the said Smith, without stating what redemption, or redemption from what, or redemption under what statute. Lender v. Caldwell, 4 Kas., 339. But these defects were undoubtedly supplied by the evidence, and the defective statement is cured by the finding of the court. It is a general primfijple of law, that where a material fact is stated in a pleading, but stated defectively, the defect will be cured by a verdict of the jury or a finding of the court.

It is also claimed by the plaintiffs in error, but incorrectly as we think, that the petition below did not sufficiently describe the lot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Kan. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-burnes-kan-1871.