Billings v. Hall

7 Cal. 1
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 7 Cal. 1 (Billings v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billings v. Hall, 7 Cal. 1 (Cal. 1857).

Opinions

Murray, C.

was an action of ejectment. Court below directed the jury to find a special verdict, upon which a judgment was entered for the defendant.

Two questions are presented by the record; first, whether the plaintiff's action is not barred by the Statute of Limitations; and, second, the constitutionality of the act of March 26,1856, entitled “ an act for the protection of actual settlers, and to quiet land-titles in this state,"so far as the same requires a party, recovering possession of lands in an action of ejectment, to pay the defendant the value of his improvements. On the trial of the cause, the defendant set up possession for five years, under claim of an adverse title.

In the case of Billings v. Harvey & Tibbetts, decided at the October Term, 1856, we had occasion to examine the sixth section of the act of April, 1855, limiting the time of commencing actions for the recovery of real estate to five years, and we then held, that the act of 1855 repealed the sixth section of the act of 1850, and that the time only commenced to run from the date of the last act. How, the first act was passed on the twenty-second of April, 1850, and the last one on the eleventh of April, 1855. The time commenced to run, under the first statute, from the date of its passage, and the full measure of five years had not expired, on the repeal of the old law, by eleven days; so that the bar had not occurred before the repeal of the statute.

The learned counsel for the respondent, however, contend that the decision referred to cannot affect this case; that the amendment could not have a retrospective action, or divest rights which had become fixed and vested under the old law.

The error of this argument, as we conceive, consists in a misapprehension of the true object of the Statute of Limitations. These statutes have been properly denominated statutes of repose, because the law, for the purpose of preventing litigation, has wisely determined that there should be some period affixed, beyond which a party ought not be allowed to assert stale demands, and that the presumption of payment or of title ought to [4]*4arise after he had neglected to assert his right for a certain length of time.

Much learning has been exhausted upon this subject by the Courts of England and the United States, the result of which may be thus briefly stated: That statutes of limitation are designed to affect the remedy, and not the right, or contract; that they do not enter into the contract as ajpart of the law thereof; and that it would be inconsistent flrith sound morality and wise legislation, to suppose that it was evep intended, that when a party gave his obligation to pay a 'particular debt, he was presumed to have had in his mind a particular period of time, beyond which, if he protracted his obligation, his liability would cease. If it be true, (and there can be no doubt of the correctness of this proposition,) that these statutes only affect the remedy, and do not destroy the right, then it follows, as a necessary consequence, that' the Legislature may, by a repeal of the act, revive the right which has not been extinguished, but has been in abeyance for want of a remedy to assert it. There may be some apparently contradictory decisions, but they will be found, on examination, to result from the particular phraseology of the laws under which they arise.

The cases cited from Louisiana and Texas, arose under the doctrine of prescription, which obtained in those States, and which differs materially from statutes of limitation. Prescription is defined by civilians to be a right by which a mere possessor acquires the property of a thing which he possesses by the continuance of his possession during the time fixed by law. The prescription by which debts are released, is a peremptory and perpetual bar to every species of action, real or personal, when the creditor has been silent for a certain time without urging his claim.” So that the difference between statutes of limitation, as they are known to Courts of common law, and the law of prescription, consists in this : That the one confers a right, and the other takes away a remedy. This difference has led to the adoption of different rules in the computation of time, where the old law has been repealed, and a new one enacted; and the Supreme Court of Louisiana, following the decision of the Court of Cassation in France, has held, in the case of Goddard’s Heirs v. Urguharb, 6th La. Rep., that where the law is changed after the prescription begins to run, the time which elapsed under the law preceding the alteration, is to be computed according to that law, and that which follows is to be computed according to the new law, and the time acquired under the old law is to be added to that acquired under the new law, in the proportion that each time bears to the term required by the old and new laws.”

In the case of Gautiers v. Franklin, the Supreme Court of Texas has gone further, and held, that where the old law had been repealed, and a new one enacted one year after such repeal, [5]*5the time elapsing between the two acts migh^also be computed. This decision does not recommend itself in any manner to our approbation, and could not be maintained, onprinciple, in any respectable Court in the United States. The case of Ross et al. v. Duval, 13 Pet., is not in point. There, the statute had run the full time. The question was, whether the United Stateq Courts should enforce the statute of the State. After the statute had been running for seven years, it was adopted by process act of Congress, and it was made the duty of the United States Courts to enforce it. The opinion of the Judge, who delivered the decision of the Court upon the rule as to the computation of time, may be regarded as mere dictum, and is not sustained by reason or authority. See The Trustees, etc., v. Chamberlain et ah, 14 Illinois Rep., 495, and Gillman v. Cutts, 3 Foster N. H., 376.

Having thus, as we conceive, successfully demonstrated that acts of limitation affect the remedy, and not the right, and that they have no retrospect beyond their passage, we will proceed to consider the second proposition involved in this case.

This question is not free from embarrassment, not on account’ of any doubts we have upon the subject, treating it as purely a legal question, but because it has heretofore entered largely into the polities of this State, and become a most fruitful source of private animosity, and public discord. In addition to this, the reports of many of the States of this Union are filled with decisions seemingly sustaining the constitutionality of such a law, while, in fact, those decisions, for the most part, were predicated upon local statutes, which differ, toto ccelo, from the one now under investigation.

It has been contended that the act of 1855 violates that provision of the Federal Constitution which prohibits the State from passing laws impairing the obligations of contracts; that such contracts may be express or implied, executed or executory, and that there is, as between a State and its citizens, an implied contract for the protection of rights and property, antecedently ac-1 quired.

We are not disposed to give much weight to this argument.

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