27 Neb. 251 | Neb. | 1889
This was an action upon a promissory note. An answer was filed to the petition, when defendant in error filed a demurrer to the answer, which was sustained by the district court. From the judgment of the court, sustaining the demurrer, and rendering judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the action, defendant brings error to this court. There is but one question presented and that is as to the statute of limitations. The pleadings being short, they will be here copied in full. The petition was as follows:
“Plaintiff complains of the defendant for on or about September 6, 1877, the defendant made, executed, and delivered to the plaintiff herein a certain promissory note in writing, in words and figures as.follows:
“$83. Decatur, Ind., Sept. 6, 1877.
“'On or before the 1st day of June, 1879,1 promise to pay to the order of Aultman, Miller & Co. eighty-three dollars, with interest at six per cent from date, and attorney’s fees, payable, without relief from valuation or appraisement laws? at the banking office of Adams county, for value received in one Buckeye mower and reaper, and with annual inter
“ ‘ I certify that I own in my own name-acres of land, in the township of-, county of-, state of --, which acres are improved, and the whole worth $--; and that-and it is unencumbered except the amount of-. I also am worth of personal property over all indebtedness and legal exemptions, and there are no judgments against me.’
“ Plaintiff further says that payment has been demanded and refused, and that by the conditions of said note defendant agreed to pay attorney’s fees if suit was brought to enforce payment; that said attorney’s fees amount to the sum of twenty-five dollars; that there is now due and unpaid on said note the sum of one hundred and fifty-eight and dollars, besides the interest at ten per cent from October 20,1886, and the further sum of twenty-five dollars for attorney’s fees as aforesaid, for which sum plaintiff demands judgment, besides costs of this suit.”
The answer was as follows:
“The defendant, in answer to the plaintiff’s petition, admits the execution of said note, but says that no part of the amount claimed in said note has at any time been paid, and no promise, in writing or otherwise, lias been made to pay said note, or any part thereof, since the same became due, or any acknowledgment made by this defendant of said alleged indebtedness; that the cause of action stated in the petition did not accrue within five years next before the commencement of this action; that said defendant left
“'Civil actions, other than for the recovery of real property, can only be brought within the following periods after the cause of action shall have accrued: First, within five years; an action upon any agreement or promise in writing.’
“ Wherefore defendant demands judgment for his costs, and all other proper relief.”
The demurrer was based upon the ground alone that' the facts stated in the answer were not sufficient to constitute a defense to the action. As will be seen by reference to the petition, the note matured on the 1st day of June, 1879. It was not alleged that any payments had ever been made on it after its execution. In addition to this it was alleged affirmatively in the answer that no such payment had ever been made, and that no promise, either verbally or in writing, had ever been made since the execution of the note to pay it, and that no acknowledgment of any indebtedness had been made by plaintiff in error; that plaintiff in error resided in the state of Kansas, and had resided there since the summer of 1879, continuously; and that during the time of his residence in that state the statute of limitations, which is set out in his answer, was five years. There is no brief on the part of defendant in error, and therefore it is impossible for us to say upon what theory the district court made the ruling, and the question here discussed may not have been presented to that court.
If the statute of limitations had run against the claim in the state of Kansas where plaintiff in error resides, and the cause of action was barred by the law of that state as alleged in the answer, this was a defense to the action, and the answer could not be assailed by demurrer as not presenting a defense. Moreover, the petition itself showed upon its face that the cause of action was barred and was defective as not stating a cause of action against plaintiff in error, and a demurrer might have been interposed upon that ground. (Maxwell’s Pl. and Pr., 121; Peters v. Dunnells, 5 Neb., 460; Hurley v. Cox, 9 Id., 230; Hedges v. Roach, 16 Id., 674.)
It. is a well established rule of pleading, under the code as well as at common law, that a judgment upon demurrer must be against the party whose pleading was first defective in substance, and that a demurrer searches the entire record and must go against the first error, or, as slated in plaintiff’s brief, a bad answer is good enough for a bad! petition, or a bad reply for a bad answer. (See Bennett v. Hargus, 1 Neb., 424; Stratton v. Allen, 7 Minn., 409; Lockwood v. Bigelow, 11 Id., 70; Ferson v. Drew, 19 Wis., 241; Bank v. Lockwood, 16 Ind., 307; AEtna Ins. Co. v. Baker, 71 Id., 102; Hillier v. Stewart, 26 O. S., 652; R. R. Co. v. Mowatt, 35 Id., 286; People v. Banker, 8 How. Pr., 258; Stoddard v. Conference, 12 Barb., 573; Bliss on Code Pleading, sec. 417a.)
The judgment of the district court is reversed, the demurrer overruled, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
Reversed and remanded.