1 Kan. App. 739 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The case-made filed with the petition in error in this case contains, on page 210 of the record, the following statement: “The foregoing case-made contains all the pleadings, motions, orders, verdict, instructions given by the court (as well as those refused) and findings and the judgment rendered in the case.” On page 9i of the record is the following statement in the case-made : “ . . . the plaintiff, to sustain the issue upon his part, introduced the following testimony, to wit:” and after following the testimony clear through upon both sides, and at the end of the evidence, on page 194 of the record, is the following statement: “This was all the evidence given on the trial of this case.” While it is true that some of the exhibits shown by the evidence to have been introduced and read do not appear in the evidence, still the case contains a statement of so much of the proceedings and evidence as is necessary to present at least some of the errors complained of, and those errors will be considered by this court. The briefs of both the plaintiff and defendant in error in this case are so imperfectly prepared that it will be difficult to review each error in the order assigned. Many of them are immaterial and based upon false premises and theories. The attention of the attorneys in this case is called to the language of Horton, C. J., in Braley v. Langley, 28 Kas. 806.
The pleadings in this case raise but one issue. The petition alleges the corporate existence, the execution of the contracts, the due performance on the part of
As to the second defense contained in the eighth paragraph of the answer, there is no evidence to sustain this defense. This is admitted by the plaintiff in error in his brief. Hence, no claim for damages that may have been set up in this paragraph because of the failure to complete either of said contracts at the time mentioned therein can be considered in this case.
The plaintiff in error contends that time is of the essence of the first contract; that the petition of plaintiff in the court below alleges full compliance with the contract, and many of his assignments of error are based upon the failure of the petition to
We have carefully examined the evidence and the instructions and find that, in accordance with the views herein expressed, there was no material error committed by the court during the introduction of evidence or in the instructions given or refused.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.