A. S. White & Co. v. Ryan
A. S. White & Co. v. Ryan
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
A. S. White and Company sued out an attachment against Thomas F. Ryan, alleging him to be a nonresident, setting up a contract for the purchase of certain wheat from him, alleging his breach thereof and damages resulting therefrom. Ryan filed his answer to the petition, denying the contract or any liability for damages thereunder, and also alleging that if any liability ever existed it had been long barred by the statute of limitations, which he thereby expressly pleaded and relied upon.
The only assignment of error relied upon is that the court erred in setting aside the first verdict upon the ground that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations. The court certifies that no mention of the statute of limitations was made during the trial of the case, that no instruction was asked on the subject, no mention thereof made in the argument before the jury, and that the attention of the jury was not in any way called to this defense, except in so far as the same was relied on in the answer.
The question presented can be answered by a reference to the elemental principle, that he who alleges must prove. The defendant in error having pleaded the statute of limitations, and the evidence clearly showing that the alleged contract was made in August, 1916, whereas this proceeding
We are referred to the case of Murdock v. Herndon’s Executors, 4 H. & M. (14 Va.) 203, as authority for a contrary view, and as showing that there is a presumption of law after verdict that the jury passed upon all of the issues. It is shown, however, in that case that the statute of limitations was not pleaded, and this of course is a sufficient answer to the contention based thereon and made in this case. If the jury here intended by their finding in favor of the plaintiff to decide that issue in his favor, then their verdict was plainly contrary to the evidence because the fair inference therefrom was that the action was barred. If, on the other hand (as the trial court properly, we think, held), the jury had failed to pass upon this issue only because of the failure of counsel on either side to direct their attention to that issue, then, in either event, the action of the trial court in setting aside the first verdict was not injurious to the plaintiff in error; indeed, it might well have been contended,
In Calvert v. Bowdoin, 4 Call (8 Va.) 217, where it was manifest from the evidence that the action was barred by the statute of limitations, the court set aside the verdict because the jury had not passed upon that issue, and being of opinion that the evidence did not support either of the counts in the declaration did not send the case back for a new trial in order to supply the deficiency in the verdict, but reversed the judgment in favor of the plaintiff and entered a nonsuit.
We have no doubt whatever of the correctness of the judgment, and this because it is clear that the burden of showing that the claim was not barred because of the non-residence of the defendant shifted to the plaintiff so soon as it appeared from the evidence that the cause of action arose more than three years before the proceeding was instituted.
Affirmed.
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