Andreae v. Redfield

1 F. Cas. 863, 15 Int. Rev. Rec. 105

This text of 1 F. Cas. 863 (Andreae v. Redfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andreae v. Redfield, 1 F. Cas. 863, 15 Int. Rev. Rec. 105 (circtwdny 1872).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge.

This action is for money had and advanced, money paid, laid out and expended, had and received, etc., in the form of the ordinary money counts in assumpsit The defendant, among other defences severally pleaded, by his third plea avers that the several canses of action •did not, nor did either of them, accrue within six years before the commencement of this action. To this plea, the plaintiffs desired to file four replications, and, by the order produced on the hearing, it appears that the court, in 1867, made a special order permitting the plaintiffs to reply specially the matters specified in the order. The plaintiffs thereupon filed four several replications to the plea of the statute of limitations so pleaded. These replications are: 1st. That before the expiration of six years from the time when the moneys were had and received, etc., etc., by the- defendant, the said ■defendant promised and agreed to and with the plaintiffs, that the statute of limitations should not be pleaded, in case the plaintiffs should file their claim to be refunded the said moneys, with the collector of the port of New York, and the plea avers that the plaintiffs did file and claim within the specified period. 2nd. That the plaintiffs within six years before the commencement of this suit renewed and ratified his promises in the declaration mentioned. 3rd. That after the ■causes of action had accrued to the plaintiffs, the defendant departed from, and resided out of the state of New York, for the period of about eleven months. And 4th. That by the act of congress of March 3rd, 1S63, the defendant was discharged from, all personal liability to repay the said several sums of money in the complaint mentioned, offi: dally collected by the defendant, and paid into the treasury of the United States, but that it was by the said act made the duty, of the secretary of the treasury to repay the several sums of money officially collected-by the said defendant upon a recovery of a judgment against him in a suit brought against him in his official capacity to re-coyer the said moneys, and ■ that the secretary of the treasury, within six years before the commencement of this suit, did undertake and promise to pay the said several sums of money in the complaint of the plaintiffs- mentioned; and that the defend: ant, while collector of the port of New York, paid over to the United States the moneys exacted by him from the plaintiffs on the condition, trust and agreement that the United States should and would undertake and assume to bear and be responsible for all claims that should be made against him as such collector for moneys received and exacted by order of the treasury department, and that the moneys paid by the plaintiffs to the defendant as in the complaint mentioned were so exacted. That this suit is defended by the United States, and “that before the expiration of six years from the time when-the said money was paid to the defendant: by the plaintiffs and by the defendant to the treasury of the United States, and within six years next before the commencement of this action, the said secretary of the United-States did officially promulgate and make known and promise, and agree to, and with these plaintiffs, that the statute of limitations should not be pleaded as to any claims for refund of money so officially collected accruing within six years next prior to the. commencement of a test suit in such cases,when such test suit had been decided in favor of the claimants and such decision acquiesced in by the treasury department. That test suits for the recovery of such money, as is in the complaint of the said plaintiffs mentioned, so officially collected, had been commenced in the courts of the United States in the years 1855 and 1856, and determined in favor of the plaintiffs, therein, and the decision therein had been acquiesced in by the treasury department by letters of instruction Issued by the secretary of the treasury, dated October, 1856, and. May, 1857.” To these four replications the • defendant demurred. These replications < may be briefly described as, 1. Promise by the defendant not to plead the statute if the claims should be filed with the collector. 2.; New promise by the defendant 3. Absence, of the collector for about eleven months from the state. 4. New promise by the secretary [865]*865of the treasury, and promise by the secretary of the treasury that the statute of limitations should not be pleaded if a test suit should be brought and decided in fayor of the claimants.

As to the first of these replications, I should have had great doubts whether it was an answer at law to the pleas of the statute of limitations, but for the case of Gaylord v. Van Loan, 15 Wend. 308, and the cases therein referred to. Such an agreement, if to be enforced as an agreement, would seem to me to furnish occasion for an application to a court of equity to restrain the defendant from pleading his legal de-fence, where, by reason of the agreement, and what was done under it, it was inequitable to plead the statute. How it is, as an agreement, a legal answer to the plea is not obrious. The theory of an estoppel in pais makes the circumstances creating the estoppel conclusive evidence of the facts imported thereby, and as evidence of such fact it is useful. It is doubtless grossly inequitable for a defendant to plead the statute of limitations when, for a sufficient consideration, he has agreed with the plaintiffs that he will not; or to plead usury when, upon like consideration, he has agreed that lie will not; or to set up any defence when, upon like consideration, he has agreed that he will not defend. But a replication to a plea setting up that the defendant, for a •consideration, would not interpose any plea to the action would be a novelty at least. A court of equity can deal much better with agreements of this description, and can examine all the circumstances attending the making of the agreement and its performance, consider all the resulting equities, and grant or withhold an injunction or not as may be just. I, however, yield this doubt to the cases cited, especially since the defendant’s counsel does not. in his argument, deny tlie sufficiency of the replication on any such ground.

The second replication does not seem to be objectionable upon any facts appearing in this replication or the plea to which it is addressed.

The third replication is clearly bad, and it seems to me frivolous. No issue can be joined upon it which will either determine the truth or legal effect of the plea, or avoid it. Suppose it to be found by a verdict that after the cause of action accrued, the defendant departed from and resided out of this state for about eleven months. It does not follow that six years' have not elapsed ■since the cause of action accrued, exclusive of the period of such absence. The plaintiff should make his replication such that it takes his case out of the operation of the statute; i. e., such that if true he is entitled to recover. The issue here tendered is immaterial. When the statute exception “beyond seas” is pleaded, the replication should aver that six years have not elapsed since the defendant returned. So are the precedents, and so here the replication should show that six years have not elapsed, exclusive of the period of absence. I say nothing on tho question whether it is necessary, under the statute of New York, to reply this absence specially; it is sufficient for this occasion that he has seen fit to do so, and he cannot be permitted to force the defendant into an issue upon such a replication as he here interposes.

The fourth replication is a novel and most extraordinary pleading.

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Related

Andreae v. Redfield
98 U.S. 225 (Supreme Court, 1879)
Gaylord v. Van Loan
15 Wend. 308 (New York Supreme Court, 1836)

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 863, 15 Int. Rev. Rec. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andreae-v-redfield-circtwdny-1872.