Dickson v. Gourdin

2 S.E. 303, 26 S.C. 391, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 11, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 S.E. 303 (Dickson v. Gourdin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickson v. Gourdin, 2 S.E. 303, 26 S.C. 391, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 54 (S.C. 1887).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

This was an action against Robert N. Gourdin, and Robert N. Gourdin and Henry E. Young, the executors of Henry Gourdin, to recover the amount due on a joint and several bond executed by R. N. Gour-din and Henry Gourdin, noAv deceased, which became due in 1857. Judgment by default was rendered against Robert N. Gourdin, but the executors of Henry claimed that as to his estate the bond was presumed paid by lapse of time. Upon this issue the facts agreed upon were as folloAvs:

1. The plaintiff is the legal owner and holder of the bond in suit (which, Avith the mesne assignments and endorsements, is admitted), and there is now due on the same the sum of $760, with interest, &c.

2. That the said bond was made by R. N. Gourdin for the purchase money of negroes bought by him, and the said Henry Gourdin was surety on the bond. That interest was regularly paid thereon up to April 27, 1884.

3. That the interest was paid by the check of the firm of Gourdin, Matthiessen & Co., and charged to R. N. Gourdin, entered and appearing on their books, and rvithin the knowledge of H. Gourdin, a partner. There Avas no payment on the bond by H. Gourdin personally up to the time of his death, December 4, 1879, unless the above is such. Private bills of members of the firm were generally paid by the check of the firm, and charged to the members individually.

[396]*3964. That after Henry Gourdin’s death interest was regularly paid till April 27, 1834, by R. N. Gourdin, as above, who was an executor and sole residuary legatee and devisee. There was no separate account of the estate of IT. Gourdin kept, except one for about a year by Mr. R. N. Gourdin, and none was filed in the probate court.

5. Up to about two years ago R. N. Gourdin was owner of property to a large extent, and was easily able to pay this debt. He could have been compelled to pay it by process of law. The payment of the principal of the debt was not demanded by the hqlders of the bond. The bond was taken for the trust estate of Mrs. O’llear as an investment under authority of the Court of Equity. The circumstances of the estate and changes of trustees made change of investment difficult. For the past few years there was no trustee to do so. The credit of the obligees was high, they were brothers, lived together, and were, with others, partners, in business. Payments of interest were regularly made through their firm and entered in the firm books. H. Gourdin was conversant with this and the condition of his brother’s estate. He never demanded of the holders or applied to the court to have the said bond paid.

The question submitted to the court on these facts was whether the estate of Henry Gourdin was responsible for the debt under these circumstances ? The responsibility of Mr. R. N. Gourdin was admitted. Judge Witherspoon found, as matter of fact, that all the payments of interest on the bond were made by Robert N. Gourdin, the principal debtor; and held, as matter of law, on the authority of Walters v. Kraft (23 S. C., 582), that the estate of Henry Gourdin, the deceased surety, was discharged from liability upon the bond in suit by presumption of payment arising from lapse of time, and ordered the complaint as against the executors of Henry Gourdin to be dismissed.

From this judgment the plaintiff appeals to this court upon the following grounds: “I. Because his honor erred, in that upon the facts in the case he ‘concludes that the estate of Henry Gourdin, the surety, is discharged by the presumption of payment arising from lapse of time from liability upon the bond in suit,’ notwithstanding the judgment by default rendered against the [397]*397principal debtor on said bond. II. Because his honor erred, in that he ‘concludes, as matter of law, that the estate of Henry Gourdin, the deceased surety, is discharged from liability upon the bond in suit by presumption of payment arising from lapse of time.’ III. Because his honor erred, in that he ‘ordered and adjudged the plaintiff’s complaint herein, so far as the same relates to Robert N. Gourdin and Henry E. Young, as executors of Henry Gourdin, deceased, be dismissed with costs,’ ” &c.

The Circuit Judge was certainly right in holding that as the action was on a specialty, which was executed in 1854 and fell due in 1857, the statute of limitations as such did not apply to it, but it wras subject to the rule adopted by the courts as to the presumption of payment from lapse of time, which is expressed by Mr. Angel as follows : “By analogy to the statute of limitations an artificial presumption has long been established, that when payment of a bond or other specialty was not demanded for twenty years, and there has been no circumstances to show that it was still acknowledged to be in existence, the jury are to presume payment at the end of twenty years.” It will be observed that in such case the action of necessity is on the specialty itself, for if there is any question as to a new promise arising from payments or acknowledgments, that could not be higher than a mere parol contract. The plea is therefore not a peremptory statutory bar, but really payment, to be proved by a presumption arising from the lapse of twenty years. The presumption is one of fact, and may be rebutted; but as it is one raised by law, it is said in all the cases that it is “artificial” in character, and only to be rebutted by such proof as would take a case upon a promissory note out of the statute of limitations. That is to say, such is the case after the twenty years have expired; for before the whole time has elapsed, there is no presumption whatever. We cannot say that after five years a fourth, or after ten years a half, of the debt is paid. There is no presumption until “the end of twenty years,” and, as I understand it, before that time any payment or acknowledgment w'hich shows “that the debt was still acknowledged to be in existence,” gives a new starting point for the running of the time.

Our courts have always so held. In McQueen v. Fletcher (4 [398]*398Rich. Eq., 161), it was held that “so long as the lapse of time is less than twenty years, every admission which oppugns the inference of payment drawn from it, goes to the jury along with it, and all are weighed together according to their natural force; but when full twenty years have expired, an admission that the payment has not in fact been made cannot, of itself, destroy the effect of the presumption.” In Boyce v. Lake (17 S. C., 488), it was held that “when an acknowledgment is made in writing by the debtor charging him in direct terms, or if there be made a part payment, or part satisfaction of the interest, past due, the action must be brought in twenty years next after the time of such acknowledgment, part payment, or part satisfaction,” &c.

In Pyles v. Bell (20 S. C., 369): “A sealed note was given in 1858, upon which payments were made in 1859, 1863, 1873, and 1874, and the action was brought in 1883. ' Held, that the right of action was kept alive by the credits endorsed, and the note was-not presumed to be paid from the lapse of time.” And precisely to the same effect, see Roberts v. Smith, 21 S. C., 465.

We understand that the ruling in all these cases is conceded, as is conclusively shown by the fact that in this case judgment was rendered against R. N.

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Related

Butts v. Georgetown Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n
140 S.E. 700 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)
Dickson v. Gourdin
1 L.R.A. 628 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.E. 303, 26 S.C. 391, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickson-v-gourdin-sc-1887.