Kluth v. Kirkpatrick
Kluth v. Kirkpatrick
Opinion of the Court
J. H. Kirkpatrick sued Herman E. Kluth to recover lots 30, 31, and 32 in block 31, city block 3514, San Fernando addition to city of San Antonio and in the alternative to recover on two vendor lien notes for $183.33 each, and to foreclose the vendor’s lien on said lots. Kluth pleaded limitation of four years as against both notes. No jury being demanded, the cause was heard by the court, and judgment rendered in favor of Kirkpatrick for $577.10 and foreclosure of the vendor’s lien.
Kirkpatrick conveyed to Kluth, on April 26, 1913, the' lots herein described, reserving in the deed a vendor’s lien on the lots to secure the payment of two purchase-money notes, each for $183.33, bearing 7 per cent, interest per annum and providing for 10 per cent, for attorney’s fees, and each reciting that it was given for part of the purchase money, one to become due one year after date and the other in two years. In the deed it was recited that Kluth was a resident of Guadalupe county. The action in this case was begun on April 2, 1919, but no citation was issued until March 10, 1921, when Kirkpatrick made an affidavit that the residence of ■ Klpth was unknown, and he was duly cited by publication. It was shown that on May 19, 1921, when Kluth filed his answer, he was residing in the town of-Cost, Gonzales county, Tex. When the deed was executed Kluth was engaged in business in the village of Limerock, Guadalupe county, near the line of Guadalupe and 1-Iays counties. It was shown that it was ascertained by Kirkpatrick about the time suit was instituted .that Kluth had left Limerock, and after search it was found that Kluth had gone to Yoakum, and was running a store, but further search showed that he had left Yoakum, and his whereabouts was unknown. A letter was written to the sheriff of Stephens county at Breckenridge, the county site, inquiring about Kluth, but he was not found. Numerous letters passed between Kluth and Kirkpatrick, the first dated April 12, 1915, in which Kluth asked for an extension of one year on the notes, and in his reply to that letter Kirkpatrick agreed to extend payment of the two notes for one year from April 23, 1915, on condition that Kluth would pay the interest due on the notes. The interest was sent, in reply to this letter, by Kluth to Kirkpatrick.
If that agreement of extension had any effect without the statutory requirements being complied with, the notes became due on April 23, 1916, and four years had not elapsed from that date until April 23, 1920, about a year after suit was instituted on the notes and lien. On April 3, 1916, Kluth wrote a letter to Kirkpatrick, asking for another extension, and it was granted by Kirkpatrick, to April 26, 1917, with the understanding that Kluth send the interest due. There was no proof that the interest then due was ever paid. Kirkpatrick indulged Kluth up to the latter part of 1918, at the earnest request of Kluth. Kluth seemed to be wandering from one place to another, the letters having been written from Limerock, Kingsbury, Seguin, and Port Arthur, and he was at last found at Cost, Gonzales county. The note which was due two years after date, that is, two years after April 26, 1913, would not have been barred by four years’ limitation, regardless of extensions, at the time the suit was instituted, on April 2, 1919.
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“Not only must the initial step required by the statute be taken, but there must also be a bona fide intention that the process shall be served at once upon the defendant.”
The facts fail to disclose any such intention. Whether there were any extensions of the notes or not, they were barred by limitation when the first citation was issued in March, 1921.
The judgment is reversed, and judgment here rendered that Kirkpatrick také nothing by his suit, and pay all costs in this behalf expended.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- Kluth v. Kirkpatrick.
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published