Van Deren v. Heineke & Co.

252 P. 459, 122 Kan. 215, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 8, 1927
DocketNos. 25,425 and 27,007
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 252 P. 459 (Van Deren v. Heineke & Co.) 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
Van Deren v. Heineke & Co., 252 P. 459, 122 Kan. 215, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 2 (kan 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action for damages for breach of a contract under which plaintiff held the agency for the sale of threshing-machine feeders manufactured by defendant.

Defendant is a foreign corporation not authorized to transact its corporate business in Kansas, and plaintiff resorted to two methods of service to bring defendant into court in Sedgwick county. One of these was to cause summons to defendant to be served on one J. Wirth Sargent, a member of a firm of lawyers in Wichita employed to look after defendant’s legal affairs. Mr. Sargent had busied himself about the matter of getting defendant’s machines, wares and other personalty shipped to St. Louis, and may have performed other services either directly for defendant or as a junior member of the law firm employed by defendant.

Another method of service was attempted through summons to defendant served upon the secretary of state in the manner authorized by the statute for service on foreign corporations which have received lawful authority to exercise their corporate activities in this state. (R. S. 17-504.)

The first method of service was sharply challenged in the trial court, and affidavits and other evidence were presented bearing upon the questioned agency of J. Wirth Sargent to accept or submit to service of summons on behalf of defendant. The trial court quashed the service on Sargent; and plaintiff’s appeal from that ruling is case No. 25,425.

Defendant’s motion to quash the service of summons through the secretary of state was overruled, and apparently defendant acquiesced in that ruling. It made a general appearance by filing a motion to strike out certain matter from plaintiff’s petition. (King v. Ingels, 121 Kan. 790, 250 Pac. 306.) This motion was sustained. Defendant then filed a demurrer to the petition, which was overruled; and defendant answered with a general denial.

The cause was heard at length, and at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence defendant lodged a lengthy demurrer thereto, setting up [217]*217various grounds, one being that the contract was void for want of mutuality. The trial court ruled thus:

“It is my judgment, . . . that this contract is void for the lack of mutuality. It is further my opinion from a review of the evidence as I recollect it, that the damages shown or attempted to be shown are too remote, uncertain and speculative to form the basis of an action. The demurrer will be sustained as to each and eveiy cause of action.”

From this judgment plaintiff brings his second appeal, which is case No. 27,007.

Touching the first of these appeals, although the matter covers 101 pages of plaintiff’s abstract and 18 pages of his brief, it is perfectly plain that the question whether J. Wirth Sargent was an agent of defendant of such capacity that summons could be effectively served upon him has become purely academic and inconsequential, since the summons served upon the secretary of state was held valid and effective (correctly or otherwise), and issues were joined pur-' suant to that service. If what has just been said were not altogether sufficient to dispose of the appeal in case No. 25,425, it would have to be disposed of quite as summarily under the rale that the trial court’s determination of the question of fact — Sargent’s alleged agency — based as it was upon conflicting evidence, is conclusive.

(Betterment Co. v. Reeves, 73 Kan. 107, 114, 84 Pac. 560.)

Passing to case No. 27,007, the first error urged by plaintiff relates to the trial court’s ruling on defendant’s motion to strike out certain recitals from plaintiff’s petition. Such a motion is equivalent to a demurrer. (Norman v. Railway Co., 101 Kan. 678, 680, 168 Pac. 830.) An appeal from a ruling on such a motion must be taken within six months, otherwise this court has no jurisdiction to review it. (Civ. Code, §§ 565, 572; R. S. 60-3302, 60-3309.) Here the ruling complained of was made some time early in 1924, date not shown, but it must have been prior to April 24,1924, since plaintiff’s amended petition drawn in conformity therewith was filed on that date. This appeal was taken on February 25, 1926. Hence the error assigned on this ruling cannot be reviewed. (Jerald v. Houston, 120 Kan. 3, 242 Pac. 472.)

Appellant’s next specification of error relates to the trial court’s requirement that plaintiff should make his petition more definite and certain in some particulars. Such a ruling was well within the sound discretion of the trial court. It made for expedition in getting the case ready for trial and for economy of time in the trial itself, by [218]*218clarifying the issues. Certainly no prejudicial error arose from such ruling. (Cribb v. Hudson, 99 Kan. 65, 160 Pac. 1019. And see Fox v. Ryan, 121 Kan. 172, 246 Pac. 520.)

Appellant’s third specification of error is concerned with the vital question in this lawsuit — the propriety of the trial court’s ruling on the demurrer. The petition with its attached exhibits in this case was very long, and complicated by the inclusion of many more or less pertinent details. It occupies forty-five printed pages of the abstract. It has been held that where the propriety of a demurrer to a petition is not clear, the opposing party may await the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, when it may thereby become quite manifest that plaintiff has no cause of action and the case may then be brought to a close by a ruling of the court on demurrer. (Mercantile Co. v. Rooney, 114 Kan. 840, 220 Pac. 1048, and citations.) Although a demurrer to a petition has been improperly overruled, no prejudicial error is committed if in the course of the trial, when the court pursuant to the introduction of testimony gets a better understanding of the nature of the action, it takes the case from the jury and sustains a demurrer to the cause or causes of action attempted to be stated in the petition. At all stages of a lawsuit prior to final judgment thereon, and before the expiration of the term in which such final judgment is rendered, and where no intermediate appeal is taken, the trial court has plenary power to correct or change its rulings as justice and a' better understanding of the case and its issues may require. (Burnham v. Burnham, 120 Kan. 90, 93, 242 Pac. 124, and citations.)

Passing for the present the point involved in the trial court’s ruling that the damages attempted to be established were too remote, uncertain and speculative to form the basis of an action, let us consider the correctness of the ruling that the contract was void for want of mutuality. The first contract, exhibit A, dated January 15, 1915, among less significant recitals stipulated:

“Party of the first pax*t [defendant] agrees to manufacture and ship to the party of the second part [plaintiff] such Heineke New Improved Feeders, fourteen-foot mounted extensions, and repairs as the party of the second part may sell in the territory below described, or buy outright for cash in advance, at the following piices and terms: . . .
“Rotary-style feeders, each $70 regardless of size.
“Crank-style feeders, each $75 regardless of size.
“Mounted extensions, 14 foot, $27.
“Repairs, forty per cent (40 per cent) off regular list price.
[219]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P. 459, 122 Kan. 215, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-deren-v-heineke-co-kan-1927.