Levy v. Stewart

78 U.S. 244, 20 L. Ed. 86, 11 Wall. 244, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1478
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 20, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 78 U.S. 244 (Levy v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levy v. Stewart, 78 U.S. 244, 20 L. Ed. 86, 11 Wall. 244, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1478 (1871).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Statutes of limitations exist in all the States, and with few exceptions they have been copied from the one brought here by our ancestors in colonial times. They are regarded as statutes of repose arising from the lapse of time and the antiquity of transactions, and they also proceed upon the presumption that claims are extinguished whenever they are not litigated in the proper forum within the prescribed period.

*250 Exceptions are to be found in all such statutes; but cases where the courts of j ustice were closed in consequence of insurrection or rebellion are not within the express terms of any such exception, contained either in the original act or any other of later date.

Express exceptions of the kind, it is conceded, do not .exist, and if none can be implied, then all debts due from one belligerent to another, as well as executory contracts .involving commercial intercourse with the enemy, are practically discharged, as, if the war is of much duration, prior claims will be barred by the local statute of limitations.

Enemy creditors cannot prosecute their claims subsequent to the commencement of hostilities, as the rule is universal and peremptory that they are totally incapable of sustaining any contract in the tribunals of the other belligerent.

Absolute suspension of the right to sue and prohibition to exercise it exist during the war by the law of nations, but the restoration of peace removes the disability and opens the doors of the courts. *

Peace, it is said, restores the right and the remedy, but it cannot restore the remedy if the war is of much duration, unless it be held that the operation of the statute of limitations is also suspended -during the period the creditor is prohibited by the existence of the war and the law of nations from enforcing his claim.

On the twenty-seventh of July, 1868, the plaintiffs in the .court below commenced an action of assumpsit against the ■present plaintiff on three promissory notes, signed at New York and made payable at New Orleans. One, dated August 6, I860, due six months after date, for sixteen hundred and eighteen T6C55 dollars; another, dated August 23, 1860, due six months after date, for fourteen hundred and fifteen T559n dollars; and the other, dated August 20, 1860, due six months after date, for four hundred and forty-two 75575 dollars, all of which notes, at maturity, were duly presented for *251 payment, which being refused, they were duly protested for non-payment. Process was duly issued, and being served, the defendant appeared and pleaded as a defence the prescription of five years as established by the civil code of the State.

New facts alleged by the defendant in his answer are considered as denied by the plaintiff’ in the State courts without any replication, and the same' rules of practice have been adopted in the Circuit Courts. Matters in avoidance, therefore, alleged in' the answer, are open to every objection of law and fact the same as if specially pleaded. *

Viewed in that light, as the pleadings must be, the issue between the parties was the same as it would be in jurisdictions governed by the common law, where the plaintiff’replied denying the allegations of the answer, or pleaded specially that the operation of the prescription was suspended during the late civil war, and that the plaintiff did commence his suit within five years next after the cause of action accrued.

Testimony was taken and the parties were heard, but the court, neither party requesting a jury, overruled the plea of prescription, and entered judgment for the plaintiffs. Subsequent to the judgment a statement of facts was filed, signed by the judge and the parties, which consists of the pleadings, the notes and documents offered in evidence, the entries in the minutes of the proceedings, the judgment of the court, together with a statement of the evidence introduced. By the statement it appears that the defendant, at the dates at which the notes were given, and when they matured, resided at Bayou Sara, and that he continued to reside there during the war of the rebellion; that he had an agent in New Orleans during that period, and that he made one or two visits there towards the close of the war; that the plaintiffs resided throughout that period in the city *252 of New York; that oa the 4th of March, 3868, they brought a suit for the same cause of action; that the defendant made a compromise and settlement of the same with the attorney who instituted the suit, whereby the suit, on the eighth of May following, was discontinued; that the attorney, in- making the settlement and in discontinuing the suit, acted without authority, and that the plaintiffs repudiated his acts in the case as soon as they were informed of the same, and after-wards brought the present suit.

Exceptions were taken by the defendant to the rulings and decision of the court upon three grounds, as follows: (1.) Because the bringing of the first suit did not interrupt the prescription established by the laws of the State. (2.) Because the civil war did not interrupt the prescription under the rule established by the decisions of the Supreme Court of the State. (3.) Because the courts of the United States are bound to follow the decisions of the Supreme Court of the State in respect to the law of prescription, as applied to such causes of action.

Different views, however, were entertained by the Circuit Court, and j udgment w'as rendered for the plaintiffs. Whereupon the defendant sued out a writ of error and removed the cause into this court.

Much discussion of the first response made by the plaintiffs to the defence of prescription as set up by the defendant in his answer is unnecessary, as the court is of the opinion that the decision of the case must turn upon the second response of the plaintiffs to that defence, which is, that in computing the five years since the cause of action accrued the period during which the courts of the State where the defendant resided were closed in consequence of the late civil war must be deducted.

Regulations exist in some of the States that where a first suit is abated and a second suit is brought within a prescribed time the statute of limitation shall cease to run from the date of the first suit, but the court is not referred to any such enactment as applicable in this case, and it is believed that none such exists, as the code of the State provides that *253 if tlie plaintiff, after having made his demand, abandons or discontinues it, the interruption shall be considered as h'aving never happened. *

Grant all that, still the question remains to be considered whether the alleged prescription was not interrupted by the fact that the courts of the State where the defendant resided were closed by the late civil war for such a period of time that the bar ivas not complete when the present suit was commenced.

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Bluebook (online)
78 U.S. 244, 20 L. Ed. 86, 11 Wall. 244, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levy-v-stewart-scotus-1871.