43 Kan. 548 | Kan. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On the 1st day of April, 1880, John Guild executed a promissory note to the order of J. S. Springer, for $325, payable twelve months after date, with interest at the rate of twelve per cent, per annum. J. R. McDaniels, at the request of Guild, signed the note as a joint maker, but he was in fact only a surety; it was then delivered to J. S. Springer,
Upon the trial at the November term, 1886, Guild objected to the introduction of any evidence. His objection was overruled. The jury returned a verdict for Mrs. McDaniels, as administratrix, and assessed the amount of her recovery at $559. Judgment was entered upon the verdict. Guild excepted, and brings the case here.
The principal question for our determination is, whether the action at the commencement thereof was barred by the statute of limitations. This action was commenced October 8,1884, more than three years after the payment by Mrs. McDaniels. By the code, actions upon contracts not in writing, express or implied, are limited to three years, and actions upon con
In Pennsylvania, whose courts are very favorable to the doctrine of a fictitious revivor of the satisfied security, it has been uniformly held that it is not to be resorted to where it will have the effect to defeat the defendant’s right to plead the statute of limitations. (Brandt on Suretyship, §267, and the authorities there cited.)
In Neilson v. Fry, 16 Ohio St. 552, it is said:
“Statutes of limitation are statutes of repose, and the periods of limitation are graduated, mainly, with reference to the nature of the evidence on which the actions rest, or by which they can be defeated. The evidence in an action for subrogation is certain and enduring, mainly consisting of records or written contracts. The action for money paid, or, if you please, the right to the aid of a fiction in the prosecution of the action, rests in parol proof of a frail and perishable nature. It rests in proof of verbal contracts and relations of parties, in proof of the payment of money, and the dates and amounts of payment. If my co-debtor takes an assignment of the creditor’s security, I know where I stand, and act accordingly; prosecuting the necessary action, and husbanding and preserving my means of defense. But if he puts the transaction in the form of a cancellation of the debt, I rest in the belief that we will be placed by the law upon equal footing in regard to evidence and limitation; and therefore I pretermit my actions, and rely upon parol proof of prior liability, of payment, of counterclaim, and of set-off.”
In Harrah v. Jacobs, 75 Iowa, 72, Rothrock, J., speaking for the court, says:
“It will be observed that the relation of principal and surety does not appear from the instrument itself. If the re*552 lation exists, it must be established by parol evidence. The right of action would therefore be founded upon an unwritten contract, and under our statutes would be barred in five years.”
In this state, an action upon a contract not in writing, express or implied, must be brought within three years; and as this statute controls in this case, the action of Mrs. McDaniels was barred in three years. If the note in this case showed upon its face that the relation of principal and surety existed between Guild and McDaniels, or if Mrs. McDaniels obtained a written assignment or transfer to her of the note, or had a written agreement with Guild that she paid the same at his request, the case would be wholly different.
Counsel for plaintiff below cite the cases of Kupfer v. Sponhorst, 1 Kas. 75, and Water Power Co. v. Brown, 23 id. 688, to show that the true relation of the parties to a note may be established by parol. This is true where an action is brought by the payee or holder of a note against the parties liable thereon; but in such a case the evidence does not go to the merits, but is simply to be considered in determining among the parties liable, who is in fact principal and who surety. In this case the merits involved the direct issue between the plaintiff and defendant as to who was in fact the principal and who the surety; therefore, to establish the claim of the plaintiff below, parol evidence was indispensable. The action, therefore, was upon a contract not in writing. Until a contract, not in writing, was established by Mrs. McDaniels against Guild, the alleged principal upon the note, no cause of action was proved in her favor.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, in accordance with the views herein expressed.