138 P.2d 438 | Kan. | 1943
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action to recover for services performed and expenses incurred by plaintiffs under an oral contract with defendant to manage certain real property. Defendant has appealed from an order overruling its demurrer to plaintiffs’ second amended petition, contending the petition shows on its face that plaintiffs’ cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations (G. S'. 1935, 60-306, second). This is the sole question presented. We shall speak of the parties as they appeared in the trial court in this case.
The petition was filed July 22, 1940. The pertinent allegations of the second amended petition may be summarized as follows: Charles Abraham Haldeman, a resident of Anderson county, died September 4,1932, leaving a will giving all his property (except one tract of land) to defendant. The estate bequeathed and devised to defendant consisted of personal property of the value of about $100,000 and about 1,800 acres of land situated in Kansas and Illinois. On September 23, 1932, plaintiffs were appointed administrators c. t. a. of the estate. They duly qualified as such and entered upon their duties as administrators of the personal property of the estate. The personal property was more than ample to pay all claims against the estate and costs of administration. (We interpolate: Under the facts stated and the law of this state at that time, plaintiffs, as such administrators, had nothing to do with the real property devised to defendant. Title to and right of possession
Thereafter and on July 10, 1937, plaintiffs, as individuals, commenced an action against defendant in the district court of Anderson county to recover on their claim as individuals for expenses and services in managing defendant’s property. Defendant entered a special appearance and moved to quash the summons, which motion was sustained in November, 1937.
On June 3, 1938, defendant filed an action against plaintiffs, as administrators, in the district court of Douglas county to recover the balance of $5,834.82. To this petition the plaintiffs, as administrators and as individuals, filed a special appearance and motion to quash, which motion was sustained March 4, 1939. .
On April 13, 1939, defendant filed an action against plaintiffs, as administrators, in the district court of Anderson county to recover the balance of $5,834.82. To this petition the plaintiffs herein filed an answer and a cross petition in which they sought to recover from defendant for the care, operation and management of defendant’s real estate. Defendant, as plaintiff in that action, filed a motion to strike the cross petition as individuals for the reason that as such they were not parties and had no right to intervene. This motion was sustained June 29, 1939. About July 19, 1939, plaintiffs, as individuals, applied for leave to intervene in order that a complete and final determination could be made of the causes of action between the parties. This application was denied. On June 10, 1940, judgment was rendered in favor of defendant here against the plaintiffs, as administrators, for the amount of $7,004.
It is alleged that by reason of the facts and circumstances stated plaintiffs have expended $7,365.34 in the care and management of the real property; that defendant had recovered a judgment against plaintiffs, as administrators, in the sum of $7,004, making the total of $14,369.54, all of which plaintiffs have paid, or been required to pay, for the use and enrichment of defendant by reason of their having cared for and operated defendant’s real estate, pursuant to the oral agreement. That in connection with the management of defendant’s real estate plaintiffs received certain income therefrom, an itemized statement of which is attached, amounting to $6,905.04, leaving a balance due from defendant to plaintiffs of $7,464.30, for which the plaintiffs prayed judgment.'
In a second cause of action plaintiffs incorporated each paragraph
Since plaintiffs’ action is predicated on an oral contract, the parties agree the three-year statute of limitations (G. S. 1935, 60-306, second) is applicable. Defendant contends the statute began to run in December, 1935, wdrile plaintiffs argue it did not begin to run until before April or July, 1937. The contract pleaded was that plaintiffs were to manage and look after the real estate “until it could be sold or during the pendency of the administration of said estate.” Plaintiffs alleged they proceeded to administer the estate
Plaintiffs contend the three-year statute of limitations was tolled by the allowance of their claim for the services and expenses here involved by the probate court, November 16, 1935, until the appeal from that order was reversed, April 6, 1937, and in support of this contention cite the annotation in 100 A. L. R. 253, where the annotator said:
“The allowance of a claim against a decedent’s estate is generally regarded as sufficient to keep the claim good, regardless of any delay on the part of the claimant to take any further action toward its enforcement.” (Citing cases.)
There is a similar statement in 34 C. J. S. 749, citing cases. We have examined the cases cited by these authorities. While they arose in different ways, they have to do with debts or financial obligations of some character which the decedent owed, or on which he was otherwise obligated at the time of his death, presented within the time authorized by statute and allowed by the court, but not paid or taken into account for payment for some years later and at a time when the debt would have been barred had it not been al
Here the decedent did not owe plaintiffs’ present claim against defendant at the time of his death, and never was obligated to pay it. Neither did the claim arise out of the administration of the estate. It arose out of a private contract between plaintiffs and defendant made after the death of the decedent. It pertained to a matter that neither the probate court nor plaintiffs, as administrators of the estate, had anything to do with. Plaintiffs, as administrators, should never have presented it to the probate court, and the probate court had no authority to do anything with it except to dismiss it.
The effect of presentation, allowance or rejection of claims against an estate is discussed generally in 21 Am. Jur. 600, § 386, citing Black v. Elliott, 63 Kan. 211, 65 Pac. 215; Thomas v. Williams, 80 Kan. 632, 103 Pac. 772, and other authorities. We deem this discussion as not being directly pertinent, but there is nothing in it to sustain plaintiffs’ contention on this point.
Plaintiffs make the general contention that the pendency of the various legal proceedings alleged in the second amended petition had the effect of tolling the statute of limitations to the extent that this action was not barred. In 34 Am. Jur. 194, in the discussion of legal proceedings which tolled the statute, it is said:
“It is well settled that the running of the statute of limitations against a cause of action is interrupted by the commencement of suit on that cause of action, and it is frequently held, sometimes by virtue of express statutory provision, that during the period of the restraint, incident to other legal proceedings which are of such a character that the law forbids one of the parties to exercise a legal remedy against another, the running of the statute of limitations is postponed, or, if it has commenced to run, is suspended. [Citing Hutchinson v. Hutchinson, 92 Kan. 518, 141 Pac. 589, where a mortgagee was enjoined for many years from foreclosing his mortgage, it was held the statute of limitations was tolled pending the injunction; and other cases.] The broad, general principle that the time during which a person is prevented from exercising his legal remedy by some paramount authority is not to be counted against him in determining whether his right is barred by the limitation statute is applicable.”
In 37 C. J. 1039, 1040, the general rule is thus stated:
“Where a person is prevented from exercising his legal remedy by the pendency of legal proceedings, the time during which he is thus prevented should not be counted against him in determining whether limitations have barred his right, even though courts are reluctant to acknowledge exceptions additional to those contained in the statute itself. . . . But in order that*41 the pendency of other proceedings shall have the effect to toll the statutes of limitations upon a cause of action, the proceedings must be such as to prevent enforcement of the remedy by action.”
In Harrison v. Scott, 77 Kan. 637, 95 Pac. 1045, it was held:
“In order that the pendency of other proceedings will have the effect to toll the statute of limitations upon a cause of action the proceedings must be such as prevent the enforcement of the remedy by action.” (Syl. f 3.)
See, also, Smith v. Comm’rs of Bourbon Co., 43 Kan. 619, 23 Pac. 642; McDonald v. Symns, 64 Kan. 529, 67 Pac. 1111; Lindholm v. Heithecker, 113 Kan. 96, 213 Pac. 671, and Laupheimer v. Buck, 137 Kan. 935, 22 P. 2d 949.
The fact that plaintiffs presented their claim against defendant involved in this action, which had nothing to do with their administration of the estate, to the probate court, which had no jurisdiction of such a claim, and the fact that the probate court erroneously considered and allowed it, did not prevent plaintiffs from bringing a suit against defendant in the district court, as they have done in this case.
Plaintiffs contend that the action brought by them as individuals in the district court of Anderson county on July 10, 1937, upon the same cause of action here involved, tolled the running of the statute of limitations. But no valid service was had upon defendant in that action and it was dismissed. When service of summons is quashed no action has been commenced, within the meaning of G. S. 1935, 60-311. (Brock v. Francis, 89 Kan. 463, 131 Pac. 1179; O’Neil v. Eppler, 99 Kan. 493, 495, 162 Pac. 211; Vann v. Railway Co., 110 Kan. 799, 205 Pac. 607.) We think it has no bearing upon the statute of limitations.
Plaintiffs contend that the action brought by defendant against them as administrators in the district court of Douglas county, June 3,1938, to recover the balance due from them as administrators, had the effect of tolling the statute. But no valid service was had upon the plaintiffs as administrators or as individuals in that action and it was dismissed on March 4, 1939. We think it had no bearing on the question of the statute of limitations.
Plaintiffs contend the action brought by defendant against them as administrators in the district court of Anderson county April 13, 1939, to recover money plaintiffs, as administrators, were still holding and which they had been ordered by the probate court to deliver to defendant, in which they filed a cross petition as individuals
Respecting these separate proceedings, plaintiffs seek to invoke the benefit of our statute (G. S. 1935, 60-311), which reads:
“If any action be commenced within due time, and a judgment thereon for the plaintiff be reversed, or if the plaintiff fail in such action otherwise than upon the merits, and the time limited for the same shall have expired, the plaintiff, . . . may commence a new action within one year after the reversal or failure.”
This could not apply to the appeal by defendant from the order of the probate court of November 18, 1935, for the reason, among others, that it was disposed of on April 6, 1937; there was still more than a year and a half of the original period of the statute of limitations — three years from December, 1935 — left in which they could have filed the present action. (See Jackson v. Oil & Gas Co., 115 Kan. 386, 222 Pac. 1114.) Neither could it apply to the action brought by plaintiffs against defendant in the district court of Anderson county July 10, 1937, for the reason, among others, that there was still left more than a year of the original three-year statute of limitations in which the present action might have been brought.
Plaintiffs argue that the action brought by defendant against them as administrators in the district court of Douglas county on June 3, 1938, to recover money which plaintiffs, as administrators, owed and which was not dismissed until March 4, 1939, bridged over the termination of the three-year original statute of limitations, which expired in December, 1938. We think that can have no such effect, not only for the reason that no valid service was had in that action, but for the further reason that it in no sense involved the controversy presented in this action.
Plaintiffs argue that the action filed by defendant in the district court of Anderson county against these plaintiffs, as administrators, on April 13, 1939, to recover the sum due from plaintiffs, as administrators, in which plaintiffs filed a cross petition as individuals, setting up the claim in this action, which cross petition was stricken in June, 1939, and in which, in July, plaintiffs’ motion to intervene and set up their personal cause of action was denied, tended to toll
We take note of the fact that plaintiffs did not appeal from the judgment of the district court of Coffey county of April 6, 1937; nor from the order of the district court of Anderson county in November, 1937, quashing the service and dismissing the action brought by them against defendant; nor from the order of the district court of Anderson county of June 19, 1939, striking their cross petition in the action brought against them as administrators by defendant to recover the balance the probate court had ordered plaintiffs, as administrators, to pay defendant. All of these rulings became final.
In this court counsel for plaintiffs have filed an extended brief and cited many authorities. We have carefully considered all that is said in the brief and have examined the authorities cited. It would extend the opinion unduly to analyze these authorities. Many of them are from states where the statutes differ from our own. We find nothing in them that would require or justify a holding contrary to our views hereinbefore expressed.
The judgment of the court below is reversed with directions to sustain the demurrer.