2 Kan. App. 617 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1895
This was an action of ejectment, brought March 18, 1889, by one James Blood, to whose rights the defendants in error were afterward substituted, in the district court of Douglas county, to recover certain real estate, the title to which was claimed by the plaintiff under a tax deed. The court held the tax deed to be invalid, but allowed judgment to the plaintiff for taxes paid by him and interest
Defendants in error have presented a motion, supported by affidavits, to correct what is alleged to be a clerical error in the case-made, by so changing the recitals thereof as to show that the tax deed introduced in evidence in the court below, as the plaintiff’s evidence of title, was recorded March 19 instead of March 9, 1887, as the record now states. The evidence presented on the motion is not disputed, and shows quite clearly that in the preparation of the case-made, through some error or mistake in copying the indorsements on the tax deed, the date of the recording of the deed was stated to be March 9, 1887, when the actual date, as shown by the certificate of the register of deeds indorsed on the original deed which was introduced upon the trial, was March 19, 1887. Counsel who now appear f<jty’ plaintiff in error do not deny that this clerical error was made, but insist upon standing by the record as it is, and object to any correction being made by this court. In the face of such objection, it is probably true, at least in the absence of any showing of fraud, that the case-made must be accepted by this court as it was settled and signed by the trial judge. It is not within the province of an appellate court, in this manner, to revise and alter a bill of exceptions or case-made, upon an allegation of error and mistake therein committed by the trial judge, who is made by statute the exclusive judge of what should be inserted to make a true record. (Shepard v. Peyton, 12 Kan. 616; M. K. & T. Rly. Co. v. City of Fort Scott, 15 id. 435; Building Asso
On examination of the brief of plaintiff in error filed in this case, w.e find no questions presented that were before the ferial court; the only matter now urged for a reversal of the judgment being, that the action cannot be maintained because it was barred by the two-years statute of limitations. Had the facts appeared in the lower court as they do here, this statute, if properly pleaded, would have furnished a complete defense to the action. The alleged error in the record, as to the date of the recording of the tax deed, furnishes the only basis for this contention; and this court is asked to reverse the judgment for a reason which does not exist in fact, which was not in the case in the court below, and which would not be here but for a misstatement of fact for which the plaintiff in error himself is responsible.
To meet this situation, counsel for the defendants in error move to dismiss the case for the reason that the plaintiff in error has not made service of his brief as required by the rules of this court. It is admitted that the brief of plaintiff in error, now on file in this case, was not served on the defendants in error, or their counsel, until some days after the time required by the rules of this court. This case has been pending in the supreme court and in this court over four
But, even taking the record as it is, we think the judgment must be affirmed. The pleadings consist of a petition containing general allegations of title and right of possession, without stating how the title was derived, and was such a petition as was sufficient under the statute. (¶4698, Gen. Stat. 1889.) The answer of the defendant was simply a general denial. Neither in the pleadings, nor in any of the objections or motions made by the defendant below, nor in any of the proceedings of the trial, was there any reference to the time that elapsed between the recording of the tax deed and the commencement of the action, nor a suggestion that the action was barred. It is well settled that if a statute of limitations is relied upon by a defendant to bar the prosecution of an action against him, such statute must be specially pleaded, unless it appears upon the face of the plaintiff’s petition that his cause of action is barred. If
It is only just to state that Messrs. Riggs & Nevison, who were attorneys for the plaintiff in error in the lower court, seem to have no connection with the case in this court.
The judgment will be affirmed.