Jett v. Hempstead

25 Ark. 462
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 Ark. 462 (Jett v. Hempstead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jett v. Hempstead, 25 Ark. 462 (Ark. 1869).

Opinion

WlLSHIRE, J.

This was a proceeding instituted in the probate court of Hempstead county, by Elizabeth Hempstead, as executrix of Samuel H. Hempstead, deceased, against Hester Jett, as executrix of Benjamin P. Jett, deceased, for the allowance and classification of a demand based upon a receipt of Benjamin P. .Jett, for certain collections placed in his hands by Samuel P. Hemp-stead.

The defendant, in the probate court, interposed the plea of statute of limitations, to which issue was joined, and the case submitted.Jo the court, which allowed the claim, and classed it in the fourth class of claims, for the sum of $50, with six per cent, interest from the 19th day of December, 1855, and the sum of $600, with interest at six per cent., from the first day of March, 1856, which, on appeal to the circuit court, was in all things affirmed.

The claim, was duly authenticated, and rejected by the executrix of Benjamin P. Jett, and the aid of the probate court invoked to obtain its allowance and classification.

On. .the trial the plaintiff filed the claim sought to be allowed, which appears in the transcript as follows:

“Benjamin P. Jett, to the estate of Samuel H. Hempstead^ Dr.

“ Por amount of iiote on -R. H. Winn for $50, 6 per cent, interest from 19'th December, 1855. ■

“ Amount of accepted draft on B. P. Ryburn for $600, 6 per cent, interest from March-1,1856.”

To which demand was attached a memorandum receipt as follows:

“ S. H. Hempstead has left with me, to be collected for his benefit, a . note on R. H. Winn for- $50, dated December 18, 1855, due ■ said Hempstead one day after date; also, the accepted draft of B. F; Ryburn for $600, on first day of March, 1856, payable to said Hempstead.

“Signed: - BENJ. P. JETT.”

The first question to be determined is that raised by the plea of the statute of limitations. It is admitted, by the agreed statement of - facts copied Into the transcript:

1. That Samuel H. Hempstead died in the year 1862.

2. That the plaintiff is executrix. ■■

3. That the signature to the receipt. is in the proper handwriting of B. P. Jett;

4. That a demand was made on the executrix of the will of Jett, for the' note or draft in said receipt specified, on or about the 4th or 5th day of May, 1866, before the claim was presented for allowance, and that neither said note or draft could' be found among Jett’s papers.

5. That Jett departed this life in 1865.

■6. That defendant is his executrix.

7. That Daniel R. Winn, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he executed the note for $50, as specified in the receipt to said Hempstead, and that, some time in 1856, he paid the same to Jett.

8. That W. W. Andrews testified that he knew Ryburn; that he left the State for Texas in the year 1858 or 1859 ; that, before he left, he sent for him to settle up the business-between them; that Ryburn did so by giving a draft ón a house in New Orleans, and that said draft was paid, and, from information, he thought Ryburn dead.

The record does not disclose whether Jett was an attorney or a collecting agent; but it is evident that, by giving the receipt he did for the collection, he became the agent of Hemp-stead, for the purpose of collecting the note and draft received by him, and collecting a part of them, as is shown by the testimony of Winn, he so acted.

It is true the receipt bears no date; but, from the agreed statement of the parties as to the testimony, it appears that' Winn, sometime in the year 1856, paid to Jett the amount of the $50 note specified in the receipt, and from that fact the-conclusion is reasonable that the receipt was given by Jett prior to that payment.

The appellant insists that this action is for money had and received, and not on an instrument in writing.. We think- it is immaterial, so far as relates to the question of the statute of limitations in this case is concerned, whether the action was for money had and received, or was on an instrument of writing. It is well known, to every member of the legal profession, that the statute of limitations does not commence to-' run until there is a complete present cause of action; then it •only remains for us to determine when the cause of action in • this case accrued; when it was complete. An action may be said to have accrued when the plaintiff has a right to commence it. This court have heretofore held that an action can not be sustained against an attorney at law, and the same rule would apply to ah agent, for money collected by him for his ■clients, until after a special demand has been made by the Client, or some one duly authorized by- him to make the demand, and a refusal to pay over or remit, after instructions.: Cummins v. McLain & Badgett, 2 Ark., 412; Sevier v. Holliday, ib., 512; Palmer & Southmayed v. Ashley Ringo, 3 Ark., 75; Taylor v. Spears., 6 Ark., 381, and 8 Ark., 434; Warner v. Bridges, 6 Ark,, 385. This doctrine seems to be universally held by all the courts of this country. But it must be "borne in mind that it is in cases where the attorney has faithfully performed his duty, by giving his client timely notice of his action, &c.

If is the - duty 'of an attorney-or agent, who has collected money’ for ■ or on- account of his client of principal, to give notice within a reasonable time ’of the fact. Story on Agency, sec. 208. When the principal has received such notice, he is ■bound'to make demand of it within a reasonable time, and if he Omits to dó so, he1 puts the statute in motion; and when he suffers the time which it limits to expire, without bringing ■suit, is concluded by his laches.

But where-an attorney or agentp has collected money, and neglects to advise his client or principal of the fact, although his client or principal might maintain suit against him without demand, on the principle of his bad faith, the statute of limitations will' not commence to run until the client or principal has notice by some means that his attorney or agent has -collected the money, unless the attorney or agent shows affirmatively, by ’ satisfactory- evidence, that his Client or principal •could, by the exercise of ordinary diligence, have known that the money had been collected, and was in the’hands of the attorney or agent. And this, we think, is so, because the attorney; or agent, by concealing the fact of the collection, commits a fraud upon his client, or princip al; and in this view •of the case we are supported by the ease of Riddle v. Murphy, 7 S. and R., 235.

In the case of McDonald v. Potter, 8 Barr., 189, the court said: “The principle ruled in the case of the Harrisburg Bank v. Foster, 8 W., 16, applies here.

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25 Ark. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jett-v-hempstead-ark-1869.