Lawrence v. Ball
Lawrence v. Ball
Opinion of the Court
In November, 1810, John Lawrence devised the premises to the plaintiff. In June, 1805, Lawrence entered into a contract with one Wait Ball for their sale to the latter, _ the purchase money to be paid in five years The lands were unimproved. Ball never entered into actual possession under the contract,-but was in the habit of getting timber from the lot up to his death in 1837. Some thirty-five years before the trial, one Baker, who claimed to enter under Ball, cleared several acres, and sowed a crop of wheat and afterwards one of rye. The clearing was then abandoned. Ball paid $15 of the purchase money, which was indorsed on the contract. In August, 1806, he paid to the agent of Lawrence the further sum of $21 ; and in September, 1808, the sum of $6. This was all the proof of any actual payment of the purchase money by Ball. In 1816
These facts being proved or admitted, the judge held that the presumption of payment of the money secured by the contract, arising from lapse of time, entitled the defendant to a conveyance of the premises in question, and was a full defence to the action; and that the defendant could avail himself of such defence under his answer. A verdict for the defendant was accordingly directed.
The Revised Statutes provide that a right of action upon any sealed instrument for the payment of money shall be presumed to have been extinguished by payment after the expiration of twenty years from the time such right shall accrue. (2 R. S., 301.) The rule was similar at common law. But the action must be to enforce the payment of money secured and payable by the terms of s'ome sealed instrument; and setting up the fact of payment, the defendant may avail himself of lapse of time as evidence of the fact. It is, in effect, a statute of limitations, and may be used as a shield whenever the payment of money, due and payable by the terms of some specialty, is sought to be enforced. It cannot, however, be employed to create an equitable. title in the vendee of lands which shall operate to override or extinguish the legal title of the vendor.
In Morey v. The Farmers' Loan & Trust Company, decided at the last term of this court (ante, p. 302), we held that the statute was,designed and could only be used as a shield and never as an affirmative, aggressive weapon. In that case the vendee of lands, who had been sued in ejectment,
The contract in this case is not presumed to have been fulfilled by Wait Ball after the expiration of twenty years from the time when it became due and payable, so as to have equitably entitled him to a conveyance of the premises, lie had no equitable estate therein to be disposed of at
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
Judgment accordingly.
Reference
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- Lawrence against Ball
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