Supreme Court of Kansas, 1916

Hanson v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

Hanson v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
Supreme Court of Kansas · Decided February 12, 1916 · Mason
97 Kan. 218; 154 P. 1033; 1916 Kan. LEXIS 266

Hanson v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

John F. Hanson sued the Missouri Pacific Railway Company before a justice of the peace, on account of property alleged to have been destroyed in the spring of 1910, by fire caused by its negligence. No appearance was made by the defendant and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. An appeal to the district court was taken on August 5, 1913. On December 2, 1913, the plaintiff moved for a continuance over the term on the ground, supported by his affidavit, that by reason of his poverty he had been “unable to look up all the evidence in the case and find suitable witnesses to prove the issues,” or to pay the expenses of witnesses, or to take depositions. On the same day the defendant’s attorney orally stated some facts with regard to the history of the case, and the court overruled the motion. Five days later the defendant’s attorney, with the consent of the court, filed an affidavit purporting to cover the same ground as his oral statement. Hanson filed a counter-affidavit. On December 10, 1913, the day on which the case had been set for trial, it was called, and as the *219plaintiff did not appear, it was dismissed for want of prosecution. The plaintiff appeals.

The substance of the statement made in behalf of the defendant is this: About April, 1912, the plaintiff sued the defendant upon the same cause of action before a justice of the peace. The case was continued twice, the second continuance being at the request of the plaintiff to give him time-to obtain his evidence. At the trial the plaintiff introduced some hearsay evidence, but perceiving that the justice was going to rule against him, dismissed the case without prejudice.. The present action was brought a few days short of a year after the dismissal.

Complaint is made because the defendant’s attorney was permitted to file his affidavit after the motion for a continuance had been denied. It was proper to consider the attorney’s oral statement at the hearing of the motion, and to allow it later to to be reduced to writing, verified and filed. The evidence warranted the conclusion that reasonable diligence had not been shown in preparing for trial. The refusal of a continuance was clearly within the discretion of the trial court, and the dismissal was the necessary result of the plaintiff’s failure to prosecute.

The judgment is affirmed.

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