Sparks v. Martin
This text of 150 P. 532 (Sparks v. Martin) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action in the district court was brought on the 26th day of March, 1913, to enjoin the sale of property taken under an execution. The court denied the injunction and gave defendants judgment for costs. The plaintiff appeals.
The judgment was rendered on the 20th day of March, 1903, and the validity of the execution sought to be enjoined depends solely upon a question of fact which the court decided adversely to the plaintiff, and it requires a liberal construction to say that there was any conflict in the evidence.
The question of fact was whether or not a previous execution on the judgment issued prior to the date when the judgment would have become dormant. The court found that an execution was duly issued on the 5th day of March, 1908, fifteen days before the five years expired. The execution was dated on.its face the 5th day of March, 1908, and was endorsed as having been issued on that date. The only room for possible contention that it was not issued- then is that the date was written: “this // 5 day of Mch 1908.” It is quite obvious that the figure “4” and the month “May” were written in by mistake, probably because in the body of the execution and four lines directly above these words the clerk had made the execution returnable on the 4th day of May, which was sixty days after the 5th day of March; and it is equally clear that having discovered the mistake he corrected it by writing in the “5” in place of “4” and “Mch” in place of “May.” If it were true that the execution issued on the 4th day of May it would not have been made returnable on the same date. While it is “ the issuance, and not the return, of an execution that tolls the statute” (Saville v. Shcroyer, 65 Kan. 303, 304, 68 Pac. 1130), the return and all indorsements thereon were properly considered for the purpose of determining when the execution issued. The return shows that the sheriff received it on the 5th day of March, 1909. Besides, the appearance and execution dockets and the indorsement on the execution all show that it “issued Mch 5, 1908.”
The claim of error relied upon is that the court refused to permit a witness to testify that in March, 1908, after the exe[284]*284cution would have become dormant, the deputy clerk of the district court in a conversation held in the hallway outside the clerk’s office stated to the witness that no execution on the judgment had issued. The official records required to be kept by an officer can not be impeached in that way. We suppose it would not be contended that the integrity of a record showing the filing and recording of a deed could be impeached by evidence that subsequent to the date it purports to have been recorded the register of deeds told some one in or out of his office that no such deed had been recorded.
We find no merit in the contentions raised by the plaintiff, and the judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
150 P. 532, 96 Kan. 282, 1915 Kan. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparks-v-martin-kan-1915.