Fultz v. Neal
Fultz v. Neal
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff in error filed his petition in the district court of Sumner county, alleging, in substance, that the firm of Fultz & Millard brought an action before a justice of the peace in said county, and at the same time procured a garnishment summons to issue in said action; that both the defendant and the garnishee were served, and that answer was made .show
To this petition the defendant, F. P. Neal, filed his demurrer, setting forth as grounds therefor : (1) That the petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendant, in favor of the plaintiff; (2) that the petition shows affirmatively that the said plaintiff ought not to recover from this-defendant; (3) that the petition shows that the garnishment proceedings against the bank, in the action of Fultz & Millard before the justice of the peace, were dismissed and said garnishee discharged by said justice of the peace long before the bringing of this action, and that such order of said justice of the peace dismissing 'such garnishee proceedings and discharging, said garnishee has never been vacated or appealed from, but remains in full force and effect. This demurrer was sustained, and the plaintiff elected to stand upon his petition, and brings the case here for review.
While the demurrer in this case is in three separate-paragraphs, it may be said to contain but the one real ground, namely, that the petition of the plaintiff fails to state a cause of action, and the ground which seems to have been urged, and which is here argued by counsel for both sides, is that there is no provision of the statute for an appeal from a justice of the peace-
In the latter case, Horton, C. J., reviews the different cases theretofore passed upon by the supreme court, closing with the case of Roll v. Murray, supra, in the following language :
“In Roll v. Murray, 35 Kan. 171, the action was commenced before a justice of the peace, and an order of attachment obtained ; subsequently, upon the motion of the defendant, the attachment was discharged ; afterward a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant; within the 10 days the plaintiff filed an appeal bond, attempting to take an appeal both from the order of the justice discharging the attachment, and also from the judgment of the justice upon the merits ; the appeal bond was sufficient for both these purposes if an appeal from an order of the justice of the peace discharging an attachment was allowable. This court held that the appeal did not give to the district court power to review and retry the attachment proceedings instituted before the justice of the peace. Mr. Justice Valentine, in delivering the opinion, said, among other things : 1 There is no provision in the statutes for taking an appeal from the order of the justice of the peace in any provisional remedy or in any ancillary proceeding, and no provision anywhere for retrying in the district court upon an appeal from a justice of the peace any question that pertains only to some provisional remedy or to some ancillary proceeding. The appeal is from a final judgment only, and from a judgment on the merits only, and the trial afterward to*616 be had on the appeal is only upon the merits. . . . In our opinion, attachment proceedings cannot be taken to the district court at all on appeal.’ ”
It is contended by counsel for plaintiffs in error that this language of the chief justice is dictum merely ; but it will be noted that in the case of Roll v. Murray, from which he quotes, the doctrine here referred to is laid down in the syllabus of the case, and, while Valentine, J., who delivered the opinion in Roll v. Murray, dissents from the opinion in Becker v. Steele, and thereby appears to modify the language used in the former case, yet the court, after a review of all the cases bearing upon the point, holds to the doctrine that attachment proceedings cannot be taken to the district court at all on appeal. From the fact that the attention of the court in Becker v. Steele was specially directed to the distinction sought to be drawn by Valentine, J., we must conclude that the court intended a full application of the doctrine, and we can only say, in the language of Horton, C. J., in the last-named case, “ if the construction given to the statute works injustice the remedy is with the legislature.”
It is further argued by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the doctrine which he here contends for is the same as is enunciated in Washer v. Campbell, 40 Kan. 398, 747. We think the cases are not at all parallel. That case was an action on a bond given for the purpose of procuring the release of proceedings in garnishement, and, by the giving of said bond, the garnishees were released. It does not present the question of an appeal from an order releasing a garnishee nor is that question discussed in the opinion in the case.
We do not think it necessary to consider the question
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.