Disborough v. Jones
Disborough v. Jones
Opinion of the Court
The question in this case arises upon the sixth section of the act for the limitation of actions, which, so far as relates to bonds, enacts that every action of debt upon any obligation with condition for the payment of money only, shall be commenced and sued within sixteen years next after the cause of such action shall have accrued and not after ; but if any payment shall have been made on any such specialty, within or after the said period of sixteen years, then an action instituted on such specialty within sixteen years after such payment, shall be good and effectual in law and not after. Rev. Laws 411; Rev. Stat. 93. The question is presented whether in the case of a joint and several bond, a payment by the surviving obligor after the death of his co-obligor, will take the bond out of the statute, as against the representatives of such deceased obligor.
The statute has abolished the doctrine of presumption of payment of specialty debts after the lapse of twenty years, and made time a positive bar. The action must now be brought either within sixteen years after it accrued, or within sixteen years after the last payment made on the bond. The words of the statute are, if any payment shall have been made on any such specialty, &c. We cannot assent to the reasoning by which it was urged that these words will include the case before us, and indeed, if carried out, the case of payment by any one of several persons who may be liable upon the same specialty. We apprehend the statute must be construed in reference to the rules of law which existed at the time when it was enacted. In the construction of statutes the wildest results would often occur if this obvious rule were disregarded.
The statute, as in the case of simple contracts, makes the lapse of time a bar, adopting however the period of sixteen years. It adopts, by direct enactment, the exception in regard to a partial payment, which in the case of the bar of six years was raised by judicial construction. Now it is vyell settled under the statute of 21 Jae. 1., that a partial payment, made by
We apprehend that these principles apply in the construction of this statute; that they are recognized by the adoption of this exception to the bar raised by the statute. In the case of a bond several in its inception, we apprehend that the liability being several, partial payment by one will not vary or affect the liability of the others. So in the present instance, the bond having become several by the death of one of the coobligors, and the liability of the survivor and of the representatives of the deceased obligor having become several, that it was not the intention of the statute, in contravention of settled
We hold that the payments by the surviving obligor after the death of Bidleman, will not take the bond out of the statute as against the heirs of Bidleman, and that therefore the judgment of the Supreme Court must.be affirmed.
Cited in Corlies v. Fleming, 1 Vr. 351; Merritt v. Day, 9 Vr. 33.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- DISBOROUGH SURVIVING OF DISBOROUGH v. JONES HEIRS OF BIDLEMAN
- Status
- Published