Ingraham v. Bowie

33 Miss. 17
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 Miss. 17 (Ingraham v. Bowie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingraham v. Bowie, 33 Miss. 17 (Mich. 1857).

Opinion

Handy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The material question, in this case, depends upon the construction to be given to the 11th section of the Statute of Limitations of 1844.

It appears that the several notes sued upon, had been due more than six years before the institution of the suit; and, in order to place them without the operation of the bar, the bill alleges that the defendant, - since their maturity, had been absent from the State for great lengths of time, which are not to be considered in the application of the statute, and without such .time of absence, that six years have not elapsed since the maturity of any of the notes. And upon this point it was admitted by the parties, “that, counting all the several times of absence of the defendant from the State, six years had not elapsed from the commencement of [19]*19the right Of action, up to the filing of the bill; and that since the commencement of the right of action, the defendant has frequently been in the State — in one or two instances residing, during the summer, near Natchez; that more than six years since his first return to the State had elapsed, before the filing of the bill, and that those returns within the State were known to the complainants.”

The saying of the section of the statute referred to, is as follows : If any person or persons, against whom there is, or shall be, any cause of action, as specified in the preceding sections of this Act (except for the recovery of lands, tenements, hereditaments, or leases for a term of years), is, are, or shall be, out of the State at the time of such cause of action accruing, or at any time during which a suit might be sustained, on such cause of action, then the person or persons, who are, or shall be entitled to such action, shall be at liberty to commence the same against such person, after his, her, or their return to this State; and the time of such person’s absence shall not be computed a part of the time limited by this Act.” And the question here presented upon this statute is, whether, where a defendant has been absent from the State on more occasions than one, after the accrual of the cause of action, these several periods of absence are to be added together, and the aggregate time deducted from the running of the statute, or whether the statute runs, without further deduction or intermission, from the time when he first returns into the State openly and notoriously, so that he might then have been readily sued. The former view is contended to be the proper construction of the statute, by the counsel for the appellants, who insist that the object of the exception was to allow the plaintiff the benefit of a deduction of all the time that the defendant might be absent, so that the defendant should be in the State, whether continuously or at intervals, a sufficient length of time to make up the actual period fixed by the statute, as a limitation to the action, in order to avail himself of the bar.

Let us examine this view, with reference to the language employed in the statute, and by the aid of the reason and policy upon which statutes of limitation are founded.

The statute has reference to two distinct classes of cases, in [20]*20which the absence of the defendant shall not be taken as a part of the time limited as a bar; the one is when the defendant shall be absent from the State when the cause of action accrues; and the other is, where he shall be absent at any time during which a suit might be maintained on the cause of action. If the provision had been merely what is contained in the latter clause of the section under consideration, that “the time of such person’s absence shall not be computed as a part of the time limited by the Act,” it would have been difficult to avoid the conclusion that all the time that a defendant might be “out of the State,” in whatever way such absence might occur, should be deducted from the period of limitation fixed as a bar. But the provision is, that after an absence in either of the cases specified, the plaintiff shall be at liberty to commence his action, after the defendant’s “return” to the State; “and the time of such person’s absence shall not be computed a part of the time limited.”

What “ absence” and what “ return” must have been contemplated by the language here employed ? Take the case of an absence from the State at the time the cause of action accrued, and apply the terms of the statute to that particular case. Their plain meaning is, that, in that case, the plaintiff might bring his action on the defendant’s return to the State, and that only such previous absence should not be taken as part of the time of limitation. In this respect, the provision is but the ordinary and familiar one, which excepts the time when the plaintiff was incapable of suing, by reason of the defendant’s absence when the cause of action accrued, and is founded on the just reason that the statute should not run when the plaintiff, without fault on his part, should be prevented from suing by the defendant’s absence. But there is nothing in the language to warrant the construction that, in such a case, any further exception should be extended after the defendant should “ return” to the State, and be liable to suit. And if the saving in this section embraced only a case of absence at the time the cause of action accrued, and excepted that from the running of the statutory time, there could be no pretence that the concluding clause that “ such person’s absence shall not be computed a part of the time limited,” would justify a deduction of a subsequent absence after the first return. And, the reason is, that the [21]*21statute only prevents the running of the time until the “ return to the State.”

How does the matter stand as to the other class of cases, where the defendant is “ out of the State at any time during which a suit might be sustained ?” The provision is, that the plaintiff may commence his action after the defendant’s “return to the State,” and that such absence shall not be computed, &c. What absence ? Clearly that which occurred before his “ return;” and, after his return, the exception is exhausted, and the statutory time runs on with no other interruption, in the same way as in the preceding case, in which the saving ceased upon the defendant’s return to the State. But one return is contemplated in either case; and, after such return, the time prescribed moves on. In the one ease, a deduction is made for an absence when the cause of action accrued, which ceases and the statute operates again upon the-return of the defendant. In the other, an allowance is made for a supervening absence, after the cause of action accrued, and after the plaintiff might have sued, which also ceases, and the running of the statute is restored, upon the “return” of the defendant after such absence. But neither in the one case nor in the other is there an allowance for any additional absence after the return of the defendant, under the circumstances referred to, in each of the particular cases. For the provision is equally applicable to both cases, that the plaintiff may sue upon the return of the defendant to the State, whether the absence be before or after the accrual of the cause of action,- — leaving the conclusion quite clear, that although that absence shall be deducted, yet that upon the return the action may be commenced, and there being no further exception after that time, the statute must thence continue to run without interruption.

The provision, therefore, in relation to the defendant being “ out of the State

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Miss. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingraham-v-bowie-miss-1857.