Soper v. Baum
Soper v. Baum
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The action in this instance was brought by an indorsee of the executors of the payee upon a joint and several promissory note, alleged to bear date of July 1, 1861, payable in twelve months, and signed by the defendant as one of the makers. The note has several memoranda upon it purporting to be credits for payments at various intervals, the first seeming to have been made subsequent to the first of July, 1870, the latest dated October 15,1879, and all in the hand
We are of opinion that the Court erred in this. The testimony was, in our judgment, competent to go to the jury and, if believed by them, either of the acknowledgments was sufficient to remove the bar of the Statute of Limitations.
In the case of Oliver vs. Gray, 1 Harr. & G., 204, the Court of Appeals make a number of resolutions which have been recognized ever since, in Maryland and in this District, as correct expositions of the law on the subject. Numerous
The first resolution in Oliver vs. Gray is that “ The suit is to be brought upon the.original cause of action, and not on the new promise or acknowledgment, which only has effect to restore the remedy.”
The third is “ an acknowledgment, to take the case out of the Act of Limitations, must be of a present subsisting debt, unaccompanied by any qualification or declaration, which, if true, would exempt the defendant from a moral obligation to pay.”
The seventh is that “ The acknowledgment is sufficient if I it be after the bringing of the suit,” and citing Yea vs. \Pouraker, 2 Burr., 1099, where the same point is explicitly decided.
The ninth is that “ The acknowledgment need not be made to the plaintiff himself, but may be made to anybody else.”
Tried by these standards this Court is of opinion that the acknowledgments of October 14 and November 11, 1882, fulfill the required conditions.
They are both explicit acknowledgments of an existing debt due upon the promissory note, and one of them made with the note before him; and there is no qualification or declaration accompanying either which would exempt the defendant from a moral obligation to pay the debt. The only qualification to the first was that he had no funds at the moment, but that was coupled with an invitation to call again. Call for what ? Unquestionably to receive the payment which the suddenness of the occasion alone prevented him from making on the instant. The second was equally explicit; with the note before him, recognized and identified, the defendant said: “ It is all right. I will come down next Wednesday and make a settlement.” It does not seem
Without further reasoning or illustration it seems to us that the judgment of the Circuit must be reversed, for the refusal of the judge to permit the evidence to go to the jury.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JOSEPH A. SOPER v. WILLIAM R. BAUM
- Status
- Published