Latourette v. Cook
Latourette v. Cook
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This was an action of debt brought on the 20th of September, 1850, in the district court of Dubuque county, by Latourette v. Cook, on a judgment of the inferior court of common pleas of the county of Essex, state of New Jersey, for S192 rendered in favor of said Latourette, against said Cook, on the 11th of
We are aware that there have been conflicting decisions upon similar statutes, as -in the case of Hubell v. Condr ey, 5 John. R., 132, and Bissell v. Hall, 11 ib., 168; but it will be found that in the case of Pease v. Howard, 14 John., 479, and Thomas v. Robinson, 3 Wend., 267, the supreme court of New York inclined to a different doctrine than the one in 5 John. But in the supreme court of
But it may be said that this is a foreign judgment, and an action upon it should be subject to the same defense as any other specialty. Suppose it is a foreign judgment, and suppose the merits were examinable in the district court— which we do not admit — does it follow that the statute of limitation can be pleaded to it? It is a judgment, and the plaintiff sues upon it as such, and annexes a copy of the record to his declaration, but there is no provision in the statute for the plea to an action of debt upon a judgment. The statute has expressly declared, that the plea is only allowable in an action of debt on account, or single or penal bill, promissory note, or writing obligatory for the direct payment of money, delivery of property, performance of covenants, &c. It is only by virtue of a statute that this plea of the statute of limitation can be made, and it can only apply to the particular cases enumerated. As an action upon a judgment does not fall within any of the specifications, the plea was no defense. If the language of the statute had been, all actions of debt, without stating upon what such actions of debt must be founded, then the plea would have been good to an action of debt upon a judgment. But as it set out the kind of actions, and upon what founded, the statute must be confined to the limits prescribed by the legislature.
The court erred, and the judgment is reversed, and a trial de novo awarded.
Reference
- Status
- Published