Kallenbach v. Dickinson

100 Ill. 427, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 115
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 100 Ill. 427 (Kallenbach v. Dickinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kallenbach v. Dickinson, 100 Ill. 427, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 115 (Ill. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This case comes before us by appeal from a judgment of the Appellate Court for the Third District, affirming a judgment of the circuit court of McLean county. The action was assumpsit upon a promissory note, of which the following is a copy:

“$424.20.

“Two years after date, for value reóeived, we promise to pay Morris Kallenbach or order four hundred and twenty-four 20-100 dollars, and ten per cent interest.

Gottfried Wenzel, Eliada Dickinson.”

June 3, 1861.

Dickinson alone was served with process, and there was no appearance for the other defendant. Dickinson interposed the defence, by proper plea, that the cause of action did not accrue within sixteen years. The plaintiff replied that payments were made within sixteen years, and upon the issue thus formed the circuit court, upon trial, gave judgment for the defendant Dickinson.

Dickinson was in fact but a surety on the note, Wenzel being its maker and the principal debtor. Wenzel made several payments upon the note within the sixteen years, but these were neither expressly authorized by Dickinson before being made, nor ratified nor assented to by him afterwards. The question is, do the payments thus made afford sufficient evidence of a subsequent promise by Dickinson, to remove the bar of the Statute of Limitations as to him ?

The Limitation act of 1845, upon which Dickinson relies, contains a clause providing that if any payment shall have been made, the period of limitation shall only run from that time forward. See Revised Statutes of 1845, p. 348, sec. 4. It does not say by whom such payment shall be made, nor as against whom only the period of limitation shall run, but leaves those questions to be determined by the principles of the common law. We do not regard the statute as asserting any new legal principle, but simply as enacting a principle of the common law that had been for many years applied by the courts in construing statutes of limitation. See Angell on Limitations, sec. 240, and notes.

In order that Dickinson shall be concluded by the payments of Wenzel, it must be determined that )Venzel was Dickinson’s agent, not only for the purpose of liquidating the note by payment, but also for the purpose of doing what in legal estimation is necessary to make a new promise that will remove the bar of the statute.

The contention on behalf of the appellant is, that the statute recognizes what his counsel assume was the common law at the date of its enactment, namely: that any payment on a note after its maturity, by one of several joint makers, enables the holder to bring suit against all the makers within the original period of limitation after such payment is made, and hereon hinges the controversy.

That the statute recognizes what was in fact the common law on this question at the date of its enactment, is not, we think, fairly subject to controversy, but in our opinion, on reason, on the authority of the principles announced in decisions heretofore made by this court, and on the weight of modern decisions in other courts, and the authority of text writers, the common law rule was not as thus contended. The English courts generally, we admit, since the decision in Whitcomb v. Whiting, (Douglas, 652,) have held to that effect, and a number of the courts of our sister States have, following the ruling in that case, likewise so held. But the question has never been directly passed upon by this court, and since Whitcomb v. Whiting arose under the act of twenty-first James I, and was not decided until 1781, however persuasive an argument it may be as to what the common law was upon that question, it can not be conclusive upon us as an authority. We are free to inquire whether the reasoning by which it is supported is satisfactory, and to adopt or reject the rule it announces.

The entire opinion in Whitcomb v. Whiting, as delivered by Lord Mansfield, so far as relates to this question, is as follows : “Payment by one is payment for all, the one acting virtually as agent for the rest; and in the same manner an admission by one is an admission by all, and the law raises the promise to pay when the debt is admitted to be due.”

The doctrine that the law raises a promise to pay from the mere act of admitting a debt to be due, alone, was in harmony with the prior decisions of the English courts. Freeman v. Fenton, Cowp. 548; Bryan v. Horseman, 4 East, 599; Lawrence v. Worrall, Peake, 93; Beecher v. Harney, 4 East, 599, N. C.; Clark v. Brashall, 3 Esp. 155.

It is said by the learned editors of Smith’s Leading Cases, vol. 1, part 2, notes to Whitcomb v. Whiting, in speaking of that case: “But in truth this decision was based on a conception which, though inconsistent with the letter and spirit of the statute, prevailed for more than a century in the courts of justice, that if the presumption of payment arising from the lapse of time was rebutted by the acknowledgment of confession of the defendant, the end which the legislature had in view was sufficiently attained, and the plaintiff might recover without proving a cause of action within six years. It followed, as a necessary consequence, that if the debt was confessed to exist by any one competent to make such an admission, the acknowledgment would be equally good whether his authority did or did not extend to making a new contract, and as the admissions of one co-contractor are evidence against another, a payment or acknowledgment by either was, when viewed in this aspect, a good answer to the plea of the statute by both. Davidson v. Turner, 12 Ind. 223; post, vol. 2, Bowerman v. Radenius. The authority of the principal case continued to prevail after the principle on which it proceeded had been laid aside, and it was, until recently, the established rule in England that a joint debt may be revived by one of the contractors without the consent of the rest, and notwithstanding an express disclaimer on then* part. ” This court has uniformly adopted a different construction of the statute, and held that the mere confession or admission of a debt to be due, is not alone sufficient to remove the bar of the statute. Thus, in Ayers v. Richards, 12 Ill. 148, it was said: “In order to take a case out of the Statute of Limitations, there must be a promise to pay the debt. Such promise may be implied, it is true, from an unqualified admission that the debt is due and unpaid, nothing being said or done at the time rebutting the presumption of a promise to pay. It is not sufficient that the debtor admitted the account to be correct, or that he had received the goods or the money, or had executed the note sued on, but he must have gone further, and admitted that the debt was still due and had never been paid. The bare admission of the correctness of the account or genuineness of the note sued on, is no more a satisfactory answer to the statute than would be the testimony of a witness proving the same ' facts. The statute presupposes the debt to have been due, and that there is no evidence that it has ever been paid. It would be absurd to say, that a promise shall be implied by the bare admission of the party of what the law itself supposes to be true.”

Again, in Norton v. Colby, 52 Ill. 202, it was said: “On this whole subject (i.

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Bluebook (online)
100 Ill. 427, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kallenbach-v-dickinson-ill-1881.