101 P. 467 | Kan. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
E. Baxter sued Jacob Krause upon a note. The trial court held that the action was barred by the statute of limitations, and the plaintiff prosecutes, error, claiming that the facts found entitled him to a. judgment. The findings show that Krause lived in Marion county when he gave the note, which matured August 10, 1889, and remained there continuously, except for an absence of one week, until April 2, 1894,. when he moved to Oklahoma. Between that time and the date of the commencement of the action (November-11, 1905) he made eight visits to Marion county, none-being found to have been less than one week in dura-. tion, the total time spent there during that period being-twenty-five weeks. Therefore he was personally present in this state for five weeks and two days more than five years after the notte was due and before the action was begun. But four weeks of this time must be disregarded, because he passed it in attendance upon' the district court as a defendant. (Underwood v. Fosha,
Of course whenever one against whom a cause of action has accrued is absent from the state the statute of limitations is suspended, and it is conceded that ordinarily whenever he returns it begins to run. again,* however often he may go and come. (Gibson v. Simmons, 77 Kan. 461, 94 Pac. 1013.) But the plaintiff insists that in calculating the time the statute has been in operation mere occasional visits to Kansas so brief as to offer no fair opportunity to begin an action must be ignored, and that as the court found that due diligence had been exercised in attempting to get service in this case the bar had not fallen. This contention is not without apparent support in the authorities. Its substance finds piquant expression in Weille v. Levy, 74 Miss. 34, 20 South. 3, 60 Am. St. Rep. 500, in these words:
“The plaintiff was not required to fire judicial process at him [thé defendant] as'he flew, but was entitled to a fair and reasonable opportunity for a resting shot.”
In volume 25 of the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure, at page 1251, it is said:
“In order that a return into the jurisdiction after an absence which has interfered with the running of the statute of limitations may set the statute in motion, defendant . . . must be able to show that plaintiff either knew of the return so as to have had .an opportunity to avail himself of the presence by bringing suit, or that the return or stay was so public or of such length as to amount to constructive notice or knowledge or to raise the presumption that if plaintiff had used •ordinary diligence he might have brought his action.”
Not one of the cases cited in support of this text, however, arose under a statute which, like that of Kansas, makes the personal presence or absence of the debtor the determining factor, irrespective of his residence.
To say that the statute shall not run in favor of a debtor coming into the state unless his entry is máde under such circumstances as to give his creditor an opportunity by the exercise of ordinary diligence to obtain service upon him would be to engraft a new exception upon the statute. Such exceptions by implication are not favored. (Railway Co. v. Grain Co., 68 Kan. 585, 75 Pac. 1051.) A somewhat literal construction has established the doctrine that the statute does not run in favor of one who is actually outside of the state, even although by reason of having a residence here he is exposed to service at any time. Consistently with that method of interpretation it must be held that he may have the benefit of all the time he spends in the state, regardless of whether or not-the intervals are long enough to give reasonable opportunity for service, so that he does not conceal himself.
The judgment is affirmed.