First National Bank v. Kansas Grain Co.

*31The opinion of the court was delivered by

Doster, C. J. :

This was an action by the Kansas Grain Company, as plaintiff, against the First National Bank of Hutchinson, Kansas, as defendant, to recover the amount of a deposit of money made by the plaintiff in the defendant bank, which the latter had refused to pay to plaintiff in person, and also to recover damages on account of loss of business character and standing caused by the refusal to honor plaintiff’s checks issued to other persons. The claim for the recovery of the amount of the deposit was, of course, upon the implied contract to pay upon demand. The claim for damages was in the form of two additional causes of action, in each of which the issuance of checks to third persons, their presentation to the defendant and its l'efusal to pay were stated. These refusals were alleged to have been wilful and malicious, and made with the intent to injure the plaintiff’s business character and standing, and to have resulted in such consequence. The case was tried to the court without a jury. Special findings of fact were made. Judgment upon these findings was rendered for plaintiff for $4063.75 upon the cause of action for the recovery of the deposit, and $1 of actual and $100 of exemplary damages upon each of the two other causes of action. From this judgment the defendant below prosecutes error to this court.

One of the claims of error is that the findings and judgment are unsupported by the evidence. Other-claims of error are the admission and rejection of evidence upon the trial. None of these claims can be inquired into by us because of defects in the preparation of the case-made. This document does not purport to contain all the evidence and other pro*32ceedings occurring on the trial. Following the order of the judge settling the case is this statement: “The above and foregoing case-made contains all of the pleadings, motions, orders, evidence, exhibits, rulings of the court, judgments, findings of fact, and conclusions of law, and all other proceedings and exceptions had in the above-entitled cause.” Following this are fifty or more pages of matter, apparently the testimony of witnesses and documentary evidence used upon the trial of some action. It appears from statements made to us upon the argument of .the case that this testimony and these documents were suggestions of amendment to the case-made in question, which the counsel for plaintiff in error had accepted as properly forming parts of it. However, they are not incorporated into it, and therefore we cannot consider them, nor consider the evidence in the original case-made itself. In Kelley v. Stevens, 57 Kan. 506, 46 Pac. 943, it was ruled: “Everything intended to be incorporated in a case-made for the consideration of this court should precede the signature of the judge who settles it; and held, that on the record presented in this case a general finding of the trial court in favor of the defendants must be affirmed.”

Counsel for plaintiff in error strenuously insist that there was a misjoinder of causes of action; that a, cause of action on contract and one or more in tort cannot be joined unless they arise out of the same transaction, or transactions connected with the same subject of action (Gen. Stat. 1889, ¶ 4166; Gen. Stat. 1897, ch. 95, § 83); that the several causes of action in question did not so arise, and therefore that their demurrer for misjoinder should have been sustained. Under the special circumstances of this case, as disclosed by the findings of the court, it is unnecessary to pass *33upon this question. No actual damages were allowed to the plaintiff upon either of the causes of action sounding in tort. On each of these causes of action the court found only one dollar of actual damages. These are but nominal sums, considering the character of the demands made. It is inconceivable that one whose commercial reputation has been slandered has not sustained thereby more than a dollar of actual damages. Therefore, the sums adjudged on each of these causes of action can be considered in no other light than aá1 nominal awards. The rule is settled that- exemplary damages cannot be allowed unless actual damages have been sustained. The allowance of a nominal sum constitutes no basis for the imposition of exemplary damages. (Schippel v. Norton, 38 Kan. 567, 16 Pac. 804; Adams v. City of Salina, 58 id. 250, 48 Pac. 918.) The court below was in error, therefore, in awarding to the plaintiff $200 exemplary damages, resting upon no other basis than the nominal sum of two dollars. However, these consid erations do not dispose of the question of misjoinder. They only dispose of the judgment'for exemplary damages. Nevertheless, the judgment for one dollar of actual damages in each of the two causes of action in tort does not constitute any substantial basis upon Avhich to rest a continued claim of error in overruling the demurrer for misjoinder.

Had no judgment at all been rendered upon these tAVO causes of action, it is clear that the error in overruling the demurrer, if, indeed, it was an error, Avould have been cured, or rather would have been rendered harmless. “Although a demurrer may have been improperly overruled, yet, if the demurrant was not harmed by such ruling, judgment will not be reversed on account of the harmless error.” (6 Encycl. *34of Pl. & Pr. 368.) In reason, the rule can be nowise different where, instead of rendering no judgment at all upon some of the causes of action improperly joined, judgment upon them for a nominal sum only is'awarded. Rarely do errors dn judgments for nominal sums constitute grounds for reversing cases, and it would be a violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the code, as well as a violation of the ordinary rule just stated, to reverse a judgment for a substantial amount, rendered upon a meritorious cause of action, merely because of its improper joinder with another cause of action, upon which judgment for a nominal sum only was awarded.

The judgment of the court below is ordered to be modified to the extent of the $200 of exemplary damages. In all other respects it is affirmed. The costs of this court are ordered to be equally divided.