Lynn v. Lynn
Lynn v. Lynn
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The appellant having obtained judgment at law against appellee
To this petition the appellant filed answer, alleging, in substance, that he removed to, and became a citizen of and resident in the state of Texas during the year i860, or 1861, and had resided there ever since; that Texas was one of the seceded states engaged in war with the United States during the late Civil War, and praying that the injunction be dissolved. The appellee demurred to the answer; and the demurrer being sustained, and appellant failing to plead further, the injunction was made perpetual, and this appeal is prosecuted to reverse that judgment.
It is insisted by counsel for appellant that as he was a citizen of and resident in the state of Texas, and that state was engaged in war with the United States, while this state adhered to the cause of the United States during the war, the time of his residence in Texas, up to the close of the war, should be deducted from the time that elapsed between the issuing of the first and last execution.
We do not think the answer is sufficient to raise that question. The place of appellant’s residence before this removal to Texas is not stated, but as he brought his suit in this state, and recovered judgment in 1862, we must assume that his residence was here up to the time of his removal to Texas. He says he removed to Texas in i860, or in 1864. But the precise time not being stated we must, in obedience to the rule that an ambiguous or uncertain plea shall be construed. most strongly against the pleader, assume as the time of his removal that which is most unfavorable to him.
The non-intercourse proclamation of the president of the United States was issued August 16, 1861, forbidding all intercourse between the states adhering to the government of the United States, and the states in rebellion, of which latter, Texas was one. If the appellant voluntarily left the state of Kentucky after the date of this proclamation, and went to Texas, he cannot now set up that ab-sense, and the existence of the war, as a reason why the statute of limitations should not run against him; and as he has failed to state at what time he went, we must presume he went after August 16,
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.