19 Kan. 273 | Kan. | 1877
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action begun on the 5th of April 1875, in the probate court, under sections 91 to 94 of the executors-and-administrators act, (Gen. Stat. 450,) to “establish a demand,” based on two notes of this tenpr:
$367. Charleston, N. H., Deo. 20th, 1866.
For value received, we promise to pay to John J. Hanson, or his order, Three Hundred and Sixty-seven Dollars, on demand, with interest. Hanson & Towle.
$500. Williamsburg, Kansas, May 20th, 1869.
For value received, I promise to pay to John J. Hanson, or order, Five Hundred Dollars, on demand, with interest.
Sergeant Hanson.
“ I very frequently urged said Towle, by letter, to pay my claims; and said Towle in several letters to me, in reply, wrote that he would pay as soon as the money could be realized from the assets of my brother. These letters I have made search for among my papers, but fail to find them.”
And Towle testified thus:
“I never promised to pay these notes unless their allowance by the probate court should be procured first, and the demand thus be legally established against Sergeant Hanson’s estate.”
The court having found generally for the defendant in error, the testimony of Towle must, so far as there is any conflict, be accepted as correct. And all that can be said from the entire testimony is, that there was a promise to pay upon certain conditions. Now before such a promise can be taken advantage of the conditions must exist. Green v. Goble, 7 Kas. 302. But the' conditions never were complied with. Hence the plaintiff in error can take nothing by reason of the promise.
“Your other note of five hundred dollars Sergeant told me of in his lifetime. I will attend to them' both as soon as possible.”
And in the other —
“ In reply to your last will say, I have no idea that you will allow amount due you to go unpaid, and as far as I am concerned have no disposition to do otherwise. I had forgotten you had a note that matured so soon. Even if I had not I could not have raised the amount to have paid it unless I foreclosed the mortgage on notes matured, against the advice of legal men. Money is tight, and but little land is changing hands in this country, or has since early spring. Land if put up under the hammer would not bring in cash or short-time notes more than one-half its real value. I have advertised the farm at private sale, and shall find a customer if possible this fall, and shall foreclose mortgage on notes matured in the spring, if not paid. The parties are very anxious to meet them, and seem to think they will be able sometime this winter or the coming spring. I have not raised money enough at any one time to meet your note, except at time of public sale; that was used to deed the claim, and this was to be done the first of anything. If you will have an instrument of writing made that will be satisfactory to you, until the money is raised, I will sign it. This is the only alternative except to enter the matter in court. It is impossible to entertain the matter in any other light.”
Is there in these statements sufficient to avoid the bar of the statute? We think not. A mere reference to the indebtedness, although consistent with its existing validity, and implying no disposition to question its binding obligation, or a suggestion of some action in reference to it, is not such an “acknowledgment” as is contemplated by the statute. This must be an unqualified and direct admission of a present-subsisting debt on which the party is liable, and which he is willing to pay. Bell v. Morrison, 1 Peters, (U. S.) 351; Carr’s Adm’rs v. Hurlburt’s Adm’rs, 41 Mo. 264; Chambers v. Rubey, 47 Mo. 100; Barlow v. Barner, 1 Dillon, 418; Chestnut
The judgment will be affirmed.