44 Kan. 562 | Kan. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action brought before a justice of the peace of Butler county by H. W. Morrison against W. M. Duff for the recovery of $2.45. The plaintiff’s bill of particulars, omitting title and signature, reads as follows:
“Said plaintiff alleges that within the last 60 days he, the said plaintiff, bought a lot of said defendant in the city of El Dorado, Kansas; that by the terms of the sale the said defendant was to furnish an abstract of title, showing a clear title to said property, and pay all necessary expenses up to deed from said defendant, to said plaintiff; that as a part of the purchase-money therefor, said plaintiff was to pay off a certain note; that said plaintiff has paid off said note and in all respects conformed to his part of the agreement of purchase; that said defendant failed and refused to pay for the abstract of title, and also failed and refused to pay.for transferring and recording a deed of said property to said defendant, which by the.terms of said agreement he was bound to do; that the cost of said abstract and cost of said transferring and*563 recording, all of which said plaintiff has paid, amounts to the sum of $2.45, which said sum has been duly demanded by said plaintiff from said defendant, whereupon said plaintiff demands judgment against said defendant for the sum of two and 45-100 dollars, with interest thereon from the 26th day of March, 1887, at seven per cent., and costs.”
A trial was had before the justice and a jury, and the verdict and judgment were in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $2.45. The costs of suit amounted to $12.80. The defendant, as plaintiff in error, took the case on petition in error to the district court, where the judgment of the justice of the peace was affirmed; and then Duff, as plaintiff in error, brought the case to this court for review.
Duff, the plaintiff in error in this court, plaintiff in error in the district court and defendant in the justice’s court, claims error in the two lower courts for the reason that no cause of action was stated in the aforesaid bill of particulars, and that the justice of the peace did not have and could not have any jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the action. It is claimed that the aforesaid bill of particulars did not state cause of action, for the reason that § 6 of the statute of frauds and perjuries (Gen. Stat. of 1889, ¶3166) requires that all contracts for the sale of lands shall be in writing, signed- by the party to be charged. Upon the facts of this case, however, the claim is not tenable, for the reason, among others, that it is not shown that the contract sued on was not in writing, or that it did not in every particular fulfill all the requirements of the aforesaid section of the statute of frauds and perjuries.
It is further claimed that the justice of the peace had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action, and this for the following provision of § 8 of the justices code, (Gen. Stat. of 1889, ¶5854,) which reads as follows: “Justices shall not have cognizance of any action, . . . fourth, in actions on contracts for real estate.”
Now is this an action on a contract for real estate ? Mr. Swan in his Treatise for Justices, (page 17,) says that “a
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.