Farmers Bank v. Clarke
Farmers Bank v. Clarke
Opinion of the Court
I think the instructions given by the circuit court to the jury were correct. It is not consonant with either law or reason, that when a man makes a promise or acknowledgment, you shall take a part of it, and reject the rest; that when he says, “ if you will do this or that, I will pay you,” you shall discard the condition, and make his promise unconditional. I know there are many old cases, which consider the statute as founded on the presumption of payment ; that whatever repels that presumption, is, in legal effect, a promise to pay the debt; and that, though such acknowledgment is accompanied with only a conditional promise, or even a refusal to pay, the law considers the condition or refusal void, and the acknowledgment itself as an unconditional answer to the statute. But the more recent, and, I think, the more rational, decisions take a different view of the case. They consider this a statute of repose, which ought to receive from the courts a fair and just support. They consider the acknowledgment a new promise, not a continuance of the old ; and that to revive the debt, it must be unqualified and unconditional. This is decided in Clementson v. Williams, 8 Cranch 72. And again in Wetzell v. Bussard, 11 Wheat. 314. chief justice Marshall, delivering the opinion of the court, and speaking of the acknowledgment, says, “ If it be connected with circumstances which in any manner affect the claim, or if it be conditional, it may amount to a new assumpsit, for which the old debt is a sufficient consideration; or if it be construed to revive the original debt, that revival is conditional, and the performance of the condition, or a readiness to perform it, must be shewn.” In Bell v. Morrison, 1 Peters 351.362. the court after repeating what it had decided in the cases before cited, says, “We adhere to the doctrine thus stated, and think it the only exposition of the statute which is consistent with its true object and import. If the bar is sought to be removed
It is not necessary to examine the more general proposition discussed in the argument, whether in debt on a promissory note, any subsequent acknowledgment can be resorted to, to take the case out of the statute. However, as the case of Butcher v. Hixton, [ante] in which that point was decided, has excited some remark, I shall barely say, that the case wt.s very ably argued; that for myself, I examined it very laboriously; and that on a reexamination, I continue to think the opinion there given correct, whether we take it upon the pleadings, upon the plain meaning of the statutes, upon principle, or upon authority.
Cabell, J. I am of opinion that a conditional promise to pay a debt, will not take the case out of the statute of
Concurring Opinion
I concurred in the opinions of the president and judge Carr in Butcher v. Hixton, solely on the ground, that the acknowledgment of Hart, the principal in the note in that case, could not be considered as a waiver of the statute of limitations by Butcher, the surety. I did not think it material to decide any other point made in the argument. Even in an action of assumpsit, such an acknowledgment by the principal, would not have been considered as a waiver of the statute by the surety. The vacillating decisions of the english judges on this subject are very much to be regretted; and it would be better that the legislature should interpose, and restore the statute to its original object, by an enactment that would exclude every species of acknowledgment of promise, not made in writing. If the acknowledgment stated in the demurrer to evidence in Butcher v. Hixton had been by Hart and Butcher, jointly, it would not have repelled the statute. It was a mere acknowledgment that the debt was justly due : but, as is said by chief justice Marshall in Clementson v. Williams, this would not be enough, as the statute was not enacted to protect persons from claims fictitious in their origin, but from
As to the case now before us, the caso of Wetzell v. Bussard, in the supreme court of the U. States, is conclusive. In that case as in this, the acknowledgment was conditional, and it was held that the plaintiff ought to prove performance or readiness to perform the condition, else it was unavailing to repel the statute. Here, no such performance of the condition has been shewn. I think the judgement must he affirmed.
Tucker, P. Though I think it very clear that the judgement in this ease must be affirmed, without relying on the opinions expressed by a part of the court iu the case of Butcher v. Hixton, yet I think it proper to remark as to that case, 1st, That it is not conceived to go farther than to establish the necessity of bringing assumpsit, or adding a count on indebitatus assumpsit to the declaration in debt, where reliance is to be placed upon an acknowledgment or promise to avoid the bar of the statute of limitations.— 2ndly, That however technical this may seem, yet, similar technicalities are to be found in innumerable decisions of this court, and are necessary indeed to preserve distinct the lino of demarcation between different actions, and to prevent the whole system of pleading from being thrown into chaos: see Cooke v. Sims, 2 Call 39. Young v. Gregorie, 3 Id. 446. Taylor v. Rainbow, 2 Hen. & Munf. 423. Moore v. Dawney, 3 Id. 127. Smith v. Segar, Id. 394. Syme v. Griffin, 4 Id. 277. Kirtley v. Deck, 2 Munf. 10. Wilson v. Crowdhill, Id. 302. Hall v. Smith, 3 Id. 550. Sexton v.
With respect to this case I have no doubt. Where the plaintiff relies on a conditional promise to take the debt out of the statute, he must shew the condition performed, before be can avail himself of the promise. This position is sustained by many authorities; and though in some, the condition insisted on does not appear to me, to be, properly speaking, any condition at all, yet where, as in this case, there is a real and not a mere nominal condition, the principle seems to be unquestionable. Thus although a promise “to pay ■when I am able,” involves no real condition, and should therefore be taken to be a promise to pay absolutely, yet a promise to pay “ if a collateral security should be first resorted to and prove deficient,” is, to every intent and purpose, a conditional promise, and must be performed, before the party can be charged.
But it is said that this promise having been made before the expiration of the five years, the party was then bound, and had no right to clog the promise of payment with a condition. This would have been very true, had the suit been brought within the five years. But when after the lapse of
The case of Hyeling v. Hastings, 1 Ld. Raym. 389. 421. justifies, I think, no such position. The remarks of lord Holt, when the case was first before the court, leaned that way: but on the final judgement, the court said, “Prove your debt arid I will pay you, is as strong as an express promise, after the condition is performed ; viz. the proof of the debt, which ought to be done in evidence upon the indebitatus assumpsit.” As to the case of Scales v. Jacob, 3 Bing. 638. 13 Eng. C. L. R. 85. the court was divided on this point. It furnishes, therefore, tio barrier to the free exercise of the judgement upon the question; and as I have already said, my mind is perfectly satisfied, that no conditional promise can take a debt out of the statute, unless the condition be performed ; and even when performed, it must be considered as a new promise, and not as the old debt, since the old debt was unclogged by the condition. The two contracts are radically and essentially different in this, that the one is conditional, the other without condition.
Judgement affirmed.
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