Bowdre v. Hampton

40 S.C.L. 208
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 40 S.C.L. 208 (Bowdre v. Hampton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowdre v. Hampton, 40 S.C.L. 208 (S.C. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Wardlaw, J.

Judgment non obstante veredicto can be rendered only for a plaintiff. It is proper where the defendant by •insufficient pleading, good in form but not in fact, has confessed the plaintiff’s action, but not avoided it, and a verdict for the defendant has followed an issue, so inconclusive that whichever [214]*214way it may have been found, there would still have appeared no valid defence.

Matter, which would have been good cause of general demurrer, will not, after verdict, sustain a motion in arrest of judgment, where the defect of allegation may be supplied by intendment of that, without the proof of which a verdict could not properly have been rendered. But where, after all that is consistent with the allegations actually made has been supplied by intendment, there still appears on the record a defect in substance, judgment must be arrested even after verdict, notwithstanding that an earlier condemnation of the defect might have been obtained by demurrer. The result will be that the party who might have recovered judgment and costs upon demurrer, by motion in arrest terminates the suit without judgment and of course without recovery of costs.

Where upon motion it appears, that the verdict has been rendered upon an immaterial issue, both parties are discovered to be in the wrong, and a repleader is awarded, under which they must renew their altercation, beginning at that step in the pleading which was first defective.

In this case the declaration and plea are unexceptionable. The replication first introduces matter of dispute. Instead of demurring to it, the defendant rejoined, by traversing not specifically the particular acknowledgment by payment which the replication alleged, but all acknowledgment of the plaintiff’s action within four years: and an issue of fact was joined on this traverse. On circuit there was neither debate nor decision concerning the pleadings, but simply a trial of the issue which had been presented. In this Court a repleader is not distinctly moved, either in the grounds of appeal, or in the argument: Nor is the insufficiency of the replication strenuously urged: but still the matter has been so discussed, that a decision of it becomes necessary, as a preliminary to the question which has chiefly engaged attention.

Our statute of limitations (2 Stat. 585, sec. 6, 1712,) differs from the English statute of 21 Jac. I. c. 16, in these particulars [215]*215relative to the present suit,: the English statute embraces “ all actions of debt grounded upon any lending or contract without specialty, all actions for arrearages of rent.” Ours “ all actions of debt grounded upon lending or contracts without specialty, all actions of debt for arrearages of rent reserved by indenture, all actions of covenant.” By the English statute an action of debt on indenture reserving rent is not limited, (1 Saund. 38 ; 14 Johns. R. 479 ; 7 Johns. Ch. Cases 90.) By ours it expressly is : and by ours actions of covenant are limited, whilst all actions on specialty are exempt from the operation of the English statute.

The application to an action of covenant, of the doctrine of admissions in answer to a plea of the statute of limitations, presents many technical difficulties. The whole doctrine has grown up in cases of assumpsit, and has been, in theory and practice, accommodated to that form of action. When we undertake to apply it to an action of covenant, we are met by the rules, that a parol promise cannot be joined with a covenant in one action,: and that no agreement, not even a subsequent covenant, can either in pleading or evidence, be relied on to give vitality or additional effect to a former covenant where breach is complained of, but the subsequent one must itself be the ground of suit, if its obligation is indispensable to the plaintiff’s success. An' acknowledgment cannot then, in saving a covenant from the bar of the statute of limitations, operate either as a parol promise or as evidence of such promise: as a covenant or as evidence of a covenant. To have effect it must be held simply to keep the original covenant out of the purview of the statute, as it has been expressed, to continue its obligation notwithstanding the statute, to keep it alive, to show that it does not fall within the reason or the meaning of the statute : and this it cannot do, by way of confirmation or re-delivery, but by working an influence upon the privilege, which the covenantor would otherwise have had,.to claim benefit from the statute. This privilege he may waive, is always supposed to waive where he does not plead the statute, and must be held to waive, for time antecedent, by dis[216]*216tinctly acknowledging its obligation whilst it yet has legal force. In this view it appears that the acknowledgment must be made before the bar of the statute has become complete: if made afterwards, it is only a promise in consideration of a former covenant obligatory in conscience but not in law, and must be sued upon as an original promise — in assumpsit, or debt on simple contract, if it is by parol — in covenant, or debt on specialty, if it is under seal.

We are constrained to sustain the efficacy of acknowledgments in actions of covenant, as here limited, by reflecting upon the strange anomaly and gross injustice, that would be presented by a case where a covenant to pay had been constantly acknowledged by repeated payments, until the statutory time after its delivery had expired, and then the statute of limitations was allowed to bar all further obligation. Such a case is not answered by saying, that after payment time was extended until the next payment, and so the cause of action did not arise. If one cent of either principal or interest was unpaid at the time specified in the covenant for payment, or at the precise day fixed by any subsequent agreement for forbearance, the cause of action would arise, and the statute would run on, if acknowledgment did not arrest it. The question is new, and upon future occasions the principles upon which in actions of covenant, effect may be given to acknowledgments, may be better understood and explained, than they have been by us in this case. But we are confident that acknowledgments made, whilst the bar is yet incomplete, should avail: and we see only technical difficulties in applying, to the action of covenant, the equitable considerations which have moderated the rigor of the statute in actions of assumpsit. The same difficulties would arise in actions of debt for arrearages of rent reserved by indenture : and in part, but with much diminution, they would extend to actions of debt grounded upon lending or contract without specialty.

Upon the indenture of lease, which is the foundation of the present suit, an action of covenant might have been brought, for non-payment of the first year’s rent, at any time after the [217]*21720th November, 1841: and successively an action for the rent of each of the two other years, at any time after the 20th of November, 1842, and the same day in 1848. The plaintiff being a person beyond seas, (the limits of the State,) at the time the cause of action accrued, was, under the 10th section of our statute of limitations, entitled to bring his action at any time within five years thereafter. Special attention has, by the replication and course of the arguments, been directed to the payment in January, 1847.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 S.C.L. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowdre-v-hampton-scctapp-1853.