Chambers v. Garland
Chambers v. Garland
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Suit brought on a promissory note. Declaration in tho usual form. Plea non-assumpsit, and also the statute of limitation. [Replication, setting up a new promise within six years before the commencement of the suit; upon which the defendant takes issue. Oause submitted to the court, and judgment for the defendant. The testimony embodied in the bill of excejitions is tho following: Tho defendant, on more than one occasion, offered to. pay the debt in land, and at one time offered land and fifty dollars. All these offers were within six years, and from the testimony, the court state the impression upon his mind was, that the offers were made to avoid trouble. This was all the testimony; upon which the court decided that the testimony was not sufficient to constitute a new promise, to take the ease out of the statute.
According to the current of authorities, and the great preponderance of modern decisions, the court decided correctly.
Formerly the courts were inclined to view the statute of limitation with great disfavor. For a time the American decisions were against a liberal application of the statute, but the tending, especially since the leading case of Bill v. Morrison, 1 Peters 351, lias been to carry into effect the
In the case above referred to, Judge Story saysi “It is a wise and beneficial law, not designed merely to raise a presumption of payment of a just debt from lapse of time, but to afford security against stafe demands, after the true state of the transaction may have been forgotten, or incapA^le of explanation, by reason of the death or removal of witnesses. It lias a manifest tendency to produce speedy settlement of accounts, and to suppress those prejudices which may rise up at a distance of time and baffle every honest effort to counteract or overcome them.”
Such were the views entertained by the supremo court of . the United States in regard to this statute, which nearly up -;to that time met with little favor at the hands of the courts. To plead it, was considered dishonest, and to enforce it, that . the courts were but lending themselves to prevent a creditor from obtaining a just debt. But for many years there has been great uniformity in the decisions; the courts uni versally-Regarding it as a statute of repose,dihlBextremely careful how they let in evidence alinnds to defeat its purposes.
In the case of Bangs v. Hall, 2 Pick. 368, it was held, that to take a case out of the statute, there must be an unqualified -acknowledgment, not only of the debt as originally due, but that it continues so; and if there lias been a conditional promise, that, the condition has been performed. And in the case of Sands v. Gelston, Mr. Chief Justice Spencer, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “that if at tiie time of the acknowledgment of tlio existence of the debt, such acknowledgment is qualified in a way to repel the presumption of a promise to pay, it will not be evidence of a promise sufficient to revive the debt, and take it out of the statute. In the case of Clementson v. Williams, 8 Cranch. 72, the supreme court say: “ that the statute of limitation was entitled to the same respect with other statutes, and ought not to be explained away.” In that case an
In Bell v. Rowland, Hardins R. 301, a leading case in Kentucky, the defendant made an acknowledgment that he had once owed the plaintiff, but he supposed his brother had paid it in Virginia, where the original transaction took place, in the year 1785, blit if his brother had not paid it he oived it yet. The court held, that the acknowledgment ivas not sufficient to take the case out of the statute, that the defendant was not bound to prove that his brother had not paid the debt; that the law would imply a promise only when the party ought to promise; and that the defendant ought not to have promised, under the
There are strong cases in Kentucky, but they are quoted with approbation by the supreme court of the United States, in the celebrated case of Bell v. Morrison, before cited. Whenever, therefore, the bar of the statute is sought to be removed by proof of a new promise, the promise as a new cause of action ought to be proved in a clear and explicit manner, and be in terms unequivocal and determinate. Cambridge v. Hobart, 10 Pick. 232; Gardner v. Tudor, 8 Pick. 206, Bangs v. Hall, 2 Pick. 368; 2 Greenl.
We lay it down in short, as the established doctrine of the books, that it is necessary, in order, to remove the bar of the statute, that there must be an acknowledgment of a subsisting indebtedness, coupled with a promise to pay; or with such circumstances, from which a promise to pay would naturally and irresistably be implied. With these guides before us, we have no difficulty in coming to a satisfactory conclusion in this case. Hero is no proof of acknowledged indebtedness no offer to pay, except on coiulition that tlio plaintiff would take land; no evidence that the plaintiff was willing to comply with that condition, or that, ho demanded the land, or the land and fifty dollars; in a word, the plaintiff has not brought his case within any of the principles laid down, or the authorities cited. The debt was dead in law. It had no vitality or legal existence. It was in the eyes of the law paid, and the debtor entirely dischai-ged. He was absolved from payment, and nothing but his own admission and promise could revive the original action. He made no such admission, gave no such promise. For ought that appears, he made the offer of land to
Judgment affirmed.
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