Moore v. President of the Bank of Columbia

31 U.S. 86, 8 L. Ed. 329, 6 Pet. 86, 1832 U.S. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 28, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 31 U.S. 86 (Moore v. President of the Bank of Columbia) 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
Moore v. President of the Bank of Columbia, 31 U.S. 86, 8 L. Ed. 329, 6 Pet. 86, 1832 U.S. LEXIS 458 (1832).

Opinion

Mr Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Th,e only question in this case is, whether the evidence offered upon the trial was sufficient, to prevent the statute of limitation- from barring the action.

The suit was. founded xipon a promissory note made by the plaintiff in error, bearing date the 25th of April 1816, by which, sixty days after date, he promised to pay' Gilbert Docker or order five hundred dollars, value received, at the Bank of Columbia.

The note was duly indorsed to the Bank of ..Columbia, and in July 1825 a suit was commenced in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Columbia, upon that note. The statute of limitations, among other pleas, was interposed; and the plaintiff in the court below, to take the case out of the statute, proved by William A. Rind, that in the summer of 1823 he went into a tavern to read the newspapers, when he saw in the public room the defendant James Moore and two companions drinking, Moore appearing to be elevated with what he had drank; and Whilst there, looking at thé newspapers,. he overheard a conversation between the defendant and- his *91 two companions, in which they were bantering him about his independent circumstances, and of his being so clear of debt or of the banks, when the defendant jumped up and danced about the room, exclaiming, «Yes, except one damned five hundred in the Bank of Columbia, which I caD pay at any time.” No part of this conversation was addressed to the witness. The witness had been a clerk in the bank, but was then in the prison bounds in the city of Washington, and after bis discharge from, prison, he immediately returned to the bank in Georgetown. The witness believed the defendant knew him to be a clefk in the bank. At this time he, the witness, knew the note in question was lying over in bank, and-he-knows of no other five hundred dollar note of the defendant in that bank but what is paid. The plaintiffs further proved, that upon examination of their books, no other discounted note of the defendant stood charged to him at- the time of the conversation referred to by the witness.

Upon this evidence the defendant- prayed the court to instruct the jury that the evidence aforesaid did not import such an acknowledgement of the debt in question as was sufficient to take it out of the statute of limitations; which instruction the court refused, and permitted the evidence to go to the jury, as evidence of an acknowledgement to repel the bar of the statute. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff. A bill of exceptions was taken to the decision of the court, and the case is brought here by writ of error.

The question as to what shall be a sufficient acknowledgement or promise to take a case out of the statute, has frequently received the attention and examination of this court, and the cases both in England and in this country have been critically reviewed. It is deemed unnecessary again to travel over this ground, but it is sufficient barely to apply some of the rules and principles to be extracted from these cases, to the facts in the one now before us.

This court, in the. case of Cleminston v. Williams, 8 Cranch, 72, nearly twenty years since, expressed a very decided opinion, that courts had gone quite far enough in admitting aeknowledgements and confessions to bar the operation of the statute of-limitations, and that this court was not inclined, to *92 extend them:' that the statute was entitled to the same respect as other' statutes, and ought not to be explained away. And from .the course of decisions in the state courts, as well as in England, such seems to have been-the general impression; and they have been gradually returning to a construction more in accordance with the letter, as well as the spirit and intention of the statute.

In-thfe case referred to, it was laid down as a rule applicable to this question, that an acknowledgement of the original justice;of a claim, was not sufficient "to take the case out of the statute; but thf e acknowledgement must go to the fact that it was still due. And in Wetzell v. Bussard, 11 Wheat. 310, it is held,' that the acknowledgement must be unqualified and unconstitutional, amounting to an admission that the original debt was justly demandable. If the acknowledgements are conditional, they cannot be construed into a revival of the original cause of action; unless that be done on which the revival was made to depend. It may be considered a new promise. for which the old debt is a sufficient consideration; and the plaintiff ought to prove a performance, or a readiness- to perform the condition on which the promise was made.

This is the doctrine which prevails in the state courts generally. In New York it is held; that an acknowledgement, to take a case out of the statute of limitations, must be of a present subsisting debt. If the acknowledgement be qualified so, as to repel the presumption of a promise to pay, it is not sufficient evidence of a promise to pay, so as to prevent the operation of the statute. 15 Johns. Rep. 511; 6 Johns. Ch. Rep. 266, 290.

This question again, recently (1828), came under the consideration of this court in the case of Bell v. Morrison, 1 Peters, 352, and underwent a very elaborate examination; and the leading cases in the English and American courts were reviewed, and the court say, 44 we adhere to the doctrine in Wetzell v. Bussard, and think it the only exposition of the statute which is consistent with its true object and import. If the bar is sought to be removed by the proof of a new promise, that promise,. as a new cause of action, ought to be proved in a clear and explicit manner, and be in its terms unequivocal and determinate.

*93 . If there be no express promise, but a promise is to be raised by implication of law from the-acknowledgement of the party, such acknowledgement ought fo contain an unqualified and direct admission of a previous subsisting debt, which the party is liable and willing to pay. If there be accompanying circumstances which repel the presumption of a promise or intention to pay, if the expressions be equivocal, vague and indeterminate, leading to no certain conclusion, but at best to probable inferences, which may affect different minds in different ways, they ought not to go to a jury as evidence of a new promise to revive the cause of action.. Any othér course would open all the mischiefs, against which the statute wafa intended to guard innocent persons, and exprose, them to the danger of being entrapped in careless' conversations.

.The principle clearly to be deduced.from these cases is, that, in addition to the admission of a present, subsisting debt, there must be either an express promise to pay, or circumstances from which an implied promise may fairly be presumed.

And this is the conclusion to which the English courts, after a most vacillating course of decisions, had come, before the late act of parliament of Geo. IV. ch. 14. This act shows, in a very striking point of view, the sense of that country of the great mischiefs which had resulted from admitting vague and loose declarations, in a great measure to set aside and make void the statute of limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
31 U.S. 86, 8 L. Ed. 329, 6 Pet. 86, 1832 U.S. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-president-of-the-bank-of-columbia-scotus-1832.