Keith v. Estill

9 Port. 669
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 Port. 669 (Keith v. Estill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keith v. Estill, 9 Port. 669 (Ala. 1839).

Opinions

ORMOND, J.

To a correct understanding of the important question presented by this record, and which is for the first time raised in this court, we must refer to our statutes for the limitation of actions. The clause [670]*670supposed to be applicable to this case, is the 68th section of the act regulating judicial proceedings at common law — (Aik. Dig. 270) — and is in these words:

“All actions of trespass guare clausum fregit; all actions of trespass, detinue and trover, for taking away of goods and chattels; all actions of debt, founded upon any lending, or contract without specialty, or for arrearages of debt due on a parol demise; and all actions of account, and upon the case, except actions for slander, and except, also, such actions as concern the trade of merchandise, between merchant and merchant, their factors or agents, — . shall be commenced within six years next after the cause of such action shall have accrued, and not after.”

There is no term or description in any of our statutes of limitation, which will meet the case of a judgment of another State, unless it be included in the language of the above recited act, “debt founded upon any contract without specialty.” The question, then, appears to be ¡resolved into the enquiry, Is a judgment of another State a contract, within the meaning of the act ?

It cannot be doubted, that the fairest mode of interpreting a statute, is to construe the language employed by the legislature, according to its usual popular signification, unless the context requires a different mode of interpretation, to give effect to the intention of the lawgiver. Although the word contract may, in its most enlarged sense, include the legal liability arising on a judgment from which the law implies a contract or promise to pay, yet it must be conceded that this is a very recondite and remote sense of the term, and very far removed from its popular signification. But it is conceived that [671]*671the context, so far from requiring such a construction to give effect to the law, manifestly requires that it should be construed in its popular sense. The language is, all actions of debt founded upon any lending or contract, without specialty; and is it not manifest, that lending and contract, are considered in the law as terms of equal import, and clearly indicating the same relative grade of liabilities? Again: the contracts which the legislature were' providing for, were by them considered inferior to specialties; yet both in law, and in popular estimation, a judgment of one of the States of the Union, is a debt ©f higher grade than a specialty.

Where it has been decided, both in England and the United States, that a plea of the statute of limitations, could be pleaded to a foreign judgment, the reasoning has proceeded on the grounds thus: such judgment was merely prima facie evidence of a debt. Thus, in Walker vs. Wetter, Lord Mansfield said, “ the question was brought to a narrow point, for it was admitted, on the part of the defendant, that indebitatus assumpsit would have lain; and on the part of the plaintiffs, that the judgment was only prima facie evidence of the debt;” that therefore, “ the judgment was not a specialty, but only prima facie evidence of a debt ” So, it was held in the cases of Hubbell vs. Condey, 5 Johnson, 132, and Bissell vs. Hall, 11 Johnson, — that the statute of limitations was a good plea to a suit, on a judgment of another State — and on similar reasoning, but upon a misapprehension of the effect of the judgments of our State, when sought to be enforced in other States, under the constitutional provision, as explained in the case of Mills vs. Duryee, (7 Cranch, 481.)

[672]*672In Pease vs. Howard, (14 Johnson, 479,) it was held, that the plea of the statute of limitations, could not be made to the judgment of a justice of the peace of that State. The reasoning of the court, in that case, appears to me to be conclusive. Tan Ness, Justice, after commenting on the decision of Lord Mansfield, says, “ from this, it Would seem to follow, that if the judgment had been cónclusive evidence of the debt, it would have been a specialty, and that, of course, the statute of limitations could not have been a bar.” He then proceeds to show, that the judgment of a justice is conclusive evidence, and therefore, a specialty. His criticism on the language of the statute, (which is the same as ours, except that the word "lending” is omitted in the New York statute.) is Very forcible. “Neither,” he says, “is a debt of this description within the Words of the statute; and every statute of limitations being in restraint of right, must be construed strictly. It has been held, that debt on indenture reserving rent, is not within the statute, notwithstanding the generality of its terms; and the settled construction of the statute is, that it applies solely to actions of debt founded on contracts in fact, as contradistin-guished from those arising by construction of law.”

In Hodsden vs. Harnage, (2 Saunders, 65, margin,) it was held, that upon debt on an award, the statute could not be pleaded. So, also, in Jones vs. Pope, (1 Saunders, 36,) which Was an action of debt, founded on a statute, it was held, the plea was not good, because a statute is a specialty.

• In Wyman vs. Mitchell, (1 Cowan, 320,) it was held, that a judgment obtained in New York, on a judgment [673]*673of the State of Massachusetts, was not within the insol--vent laws of New York, because the judgment obtained in Massachusetts, was not a contract; and they held, that they could look to the foundation of the judgment, upon an application for the benefit of the insolvent law. Having attained that conclusion, Sutherland, Justice* says: “Now a judgment is in no sense a contractor agreement between the parties — it is only evidence of a pre-existing duty, obligation or agreement; and the reason upon which the validity of a discharge is sustained,can have no application to a debt arising upon a judgment obtained subsequent to tbe passing of the act,where the agreement which was the foundation of the judgment, was made anterior to the act.” In Andrews vs.Montgomery, (19 Johnson, 192,) tbe doctrine of the earlier New York cases was overturned, and it was held, that assumpsit would not lie on the judgment of another Staté* because it was conclusive evidence of the debt.

In the case of Richardson vs. Beckely’s adm’r* (13 Ser. & Rawle, 395,) which was an action on a judgment obtained in the island of Barbadoes, the court held,- that the statute of limitations Was not a good plea. That was-the case of a foreign judgment, which was founded on a specialty; and the court appear, in that case, to have founded their opinion on that circumstance — holding, that it would be absurd to say,- that if the action had been founded on the specialty, that the statute would' not be a good plea, and that by being matured into a judgment, which was really a debt of a higher nature* the plea would' be let in. Without adopting the argument, in its full extent, as it might lead to embarrassing' [674]*674questions, where the judgment was founded on a tort, as in slander, or trespass vi et armis, — it is certain that the case supposed, would present a strange absurdity.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Port. 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-v-estill-ala-1839.