Court Opinion

ID: 7900203
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:54:57.811474+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:14.132697
License: Public Domain

*41The opinion of the court was delivered by
Porter, J.:
There are thirty-three errors assigned, but few of which require comment. It is claimed that the court erred in not requiring certain special questions to be answered more definitely by the jury. All of the questions were so complex and involved that the court might properly have refused to submit them in the first place. The appellants also submitted to the court twenty written requests for instructions upon questions of law and of fact which they claimed were pertinent to the issues, and error is predicated upon the refusal to prepare and give instructions upon these matters. We think the court properly denied the requests, none of which was in the form of a written instruction.
The court, however, erred in not directing judgment in favor of the appellants on the plea of the statute of limitations. There can be no question that the action was not brought within two years from the time the alleged fraud should have been discovered. (Black v. Black, 64 Kan. 689; Lewis v. Duncan, 66 Kan. 306; Donaldson v. Jacobitz, 67 Kan. 244; Rogers v. Richards, 67 Kan. 706; Hutto v. Knowlton, 82 Kan. 445.)
In Black v. Black, supra, a party was charged with unfaithful administration of an estate of a deceased person. It appeared that she had filed her report and account as required by law for the express purpose of affording information to' all persons interested, and it was held that these public records gave constructive notice to all parties as to what was done. In Hutto v. Knowlton, supra, the foundation of the rule as to constructive notice of fraud by public records sufficient to start the statute of limitations was said to consist in this:
“Where a public record is required by law to be kept as a source of. information respecting property rights and interest a duty rests upon anyone to whom the in*42formation is material to improve with diligence the opportunity of learning that which the record discloses. It follows that if the opportunity be neglected the interested person will be bound to the same extent as if he had in fact examined the record. But the rule is no broader than its basis', and if for any-reason no obligation exists to consult the record, or if the interested person be circumvented from taking advantage of his opportunity, the rule does not obtain.” (82 Kan. -448.)
It is insisted that a fiduciary relation existed between the parties and therefore the statute would not begin to run until after the actual discovery of the alleged fraud; that by reason of the relation of trust and confidence the plaintiffs were not required to examine the records to discover what had been done. The agreement which the plaintiffs relied upon was that the appellants were to manage the property for the plaintiffs’ benefit. The jury found in answer to several special questions that the appellants were the agents of the plaintiffs in all that they did in connection with the estate and the sale of the land, but we have not been cited to any witnesses who so testified. If they were agents of the plaintiffs it was because of the cir’•cumstances under which they took possession of the property. The plaintiffs offered no evidence in -support of the allegation that prior to his death Nils Nyberg requested or obtained a promise from the appellants to take care of his wife and child or to look after his estate. Both appellants denied that any such conversation took place. Nor did plaintiff Marie testify that the appellants agreed to take the property and look after it for the benefit of the plaintiffs. The appellants denied this, and testified that after the death of Marie’s husband she told them to take the land and do the best they could with it in order to save themselves."
It appears from the testimony of John P. Grant, the administrator, and H. Helstrom, who was appointed guardian of the minor in the proceedings to sell the real estate, that all the parties that had any*43thing to do with the land were Swedes who spoke the English language brokenlythat the appellants were ■poor and had mortgages on their own farms, and were apprehensive that they would lose by being sureties ■of Nyberg; that times were hard, and that land in the same neighborhood of about the same value sold in 1882 and 1883 for less than this brought at the administrator’s sale. The testimony convinces us that the land was not appráised for less than it was worth, and that neither of the appellants wanted it or wished to speculate upon it. They took it for the purpose of protecting themselves. They held a third mortgage, and there was nothing in the relations existing between the parties which made it improper for the appellants to purchase at the administrator’s sale. They bought the land for $531.58, subject to prior mortgages, and agreed to pay all the debts of the estate, which they did. Much is made of the circumstance that they did not in fact pay some of the notes they took credit for until long afterward, when they sold the place in 1884. It appears that as substitutes for the ‘notes signed by the Nybergs and themselves they gave new notes of their own, which they afterward paid-when the land was sold to Akeson’s son, or when he had paid for it. It is not suggested how this defrauded anyone or why it may not have been done in the best •of faith, except that it is claimed that one of these 'notes was in fact paid out of proceeds received from the sale of the crops. The appellants are old men, one of 'them seventy-four, and it is not surprising that they 'were unable to explain clearly all the transactions after a laspe' of so many years. This question of fraud was determined adversely to the plaintiffs when the district court on appeal reached the same conclusion as the 'probate court and discharged the administrator, after ••approving his first as a final account.
This appears to be the kind of a case to which the statute of limitations was made to apply. Twenty-five *44years before the action was brought the administrator-filed a full accounting of all his acts, in which he took credit for the payment through the appellants of three-notes, which were debts of the estate- and upon which the appellants were sureties. He filed vouchers for these claims which it is now insisted were false and fraudulent. It is true, there had been no final accounting, and he was not discharged; but an examination of' the probate records would have disclosed the allowance of these claims, and all the proceedings resulting in the-sale of the land to the appellants. It is not seriously claimed that plaintiff Marie continued during all these years in ignorance of the English language and of her possible rights and claims. It appears from her own admission that she knew of the sale of the land by the-appellants when it was made. She went with her mother to where Olson was working in the field, told him that she had heard that he sold the land for $4000, and asked if he could not pay her part of the $500 which her husband had paid on the $600 note before his death. Olson told her in reply that they had not received all the money for the land and he did not know that there would be anything left after paying-the debts, but if there was he would pay her $100. Moreover, the young man who purchased the land from the appellants in 1884 was married to Marie’s sister, and they continued to own the land until 1893, when they lost it by foreclosure proceedings. During this, time she knew that the appellants had nothing more to do with the land and that her sister and the latter’s husband claimed to own it.
The son testified, in substance, that when he was eighteen years old he first learned from his mother that the land had once belonged to his father, and he took .the deed found among some old papers with the intention of having inquiries made about their rights -in the-land. He waited until he was twenty-seven years of’ age before he brought the action. During all this time-*45he lived in McPherson county, and there is no pretense that he continued in ignorance of the English language or that he was under any disability after he arrived at majority which prevented him from making an examination of the records and from discovering all that he claims to have discovered in 1907.
A careful examination of the record fails in our opinion to disclose fraud or bad faith on the part of the appellants. The jury have found otherwise, but the case should not have been submitted to a jury, for the reason that the plaintiffs have slept too long upon their rights to maintain the action.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with direction to enter judgment for the appellants.