71 P. 249 | Kan. | 1903
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Two actions which William Scully had brought against Robert Smith, to recover unpaid rentals for farming lands, were, by order of the court, consolidated. In the. consolidated case an amended petition was filed, which included numerous items of charges and credits covering a period of twelve years. It was averred that there had been settlements between the parties of many of the items, but the accounts for rents and taxes for nearly three years were not included in any of the settlements. The answer of the defendant denied the settlement of any portion of the accounts, and, while admitting the items of credit in the account alleged by the plaintiff, he set up a large number of additional payments and credits, running from 1882 until 1895. They included payment of rents and taxes, credits for donations made and accepted, for wire fencing furnished, and for ditching done. He also answered that the credits in the accounts between the parties exceeded the charge's during portions of the time the account was running, and he therefore asked that the plaintiff, Scully, account to him for interest on the surplus credits, amounting to $580.
The first trial of the case resulted in a judgment for the defendant, Smith, which was reversed by the court of appeals. (Scully v. Smith, 9 Kan. App. 823, 60 Pac. 481.) When the case was remanded for an
The first objection made here is that it was not a case for compulsory reference. It is said that such a reference is not permissible where the accounts are stated or have been settled. There would be force in the claim if nothing had been submitted for trial except the settled portion of the account, but the issues were not so limited by the pleadings. While plaintiff below alleged that there had been several settlements of accounts, the petition, as we have seen, included items of accounts extending over a period of three years, of which no settlement was claimed by either party. Again, the answer of the defendant not only denied settlements, but set up a long account embracing numerous items of credits and charges involved in the transactions alleged by the plaintiff to have been settled, as well as some that were not. In that way the defendant himself asked for an examination of mutual accounts, and the statute provides that where such an examination is necessary a reference without consent may be made. (Williams v. Elliott, 17 Kan. 523; Galbraith v. McCormick, 23 id. 706.) The fact that one of the parties to an account claims that a portion of it has been adjusted, which claim the other denies, will not prevent a reference and determination of the entire account, including any incidental settlements of portions of the same. It was not necessary for the referee to find specially upon items found to have been previously settled by the parties.
There is complaint of the admission of testimony given upon the former trial by witnesses who have since gone out of the jurisdiction of the court and reside beyond the limits of the state. The official stenographer who took the testimony, and who made and placed a transcript of the same in a case-made for the court of appeals, was called as a witness, and, after he had examined the transcript which he had previously made, testified that he had compared it with his notes and had found it to be correct and a true translation of the testimony given upon the former trial. His translation of the testimony of the
We find no error in the record and, therefore, the judgment of the district court will be affirmed.