Nichols v. Briggs

18 S.C. 473, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 S.C. 473 (Nichols v. Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols v. Briggs, 18 S.C. 473, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 18 (S.C. 1883).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

This was an action to foreclose a mortgage upon a tract of land, executed by the defendant on June 4th, 1874, “ for the better securing the payment ” of his note under seal for $500, bearing date the same day, and payable one year thereafter (June 4th, 1875), with interest from date. The action was commenced January 14th, 1882, and the defense was the statute of limitations. It was insisted that from the time the note fell due, June 4th, 1875, until the action was brought, January 14th, 1882, more.than six years had expired, and recovery at law on the note being barred by the statute of limitations, the defendant was not liable to the plaintiff in' any way whatever, either on the note or mortgage; adding to the third paragraph of his answer a statement that he invoked the plea of the statute in order to reimburse himself for one-half of the Gazaway Wilson lands, of which he was fraudulently deprived by the plaintiff herein, by reason of the plaintiff taking advantage of the fact that the agreement that the plaintiff should purchase the said lands for the joint use of himself and defendant was not in writing.”

The cause came on to be heard before Judge Cothran, who, [479]*479upon motion of the plaintiff’s counsel, granted an order to strike out so much of paragraph three of defendant’s answer as undertook to assign his motive for invoking the plea, viz.: all after the words “due and owing by defendant to plaintiff.” The judge then considering the case, disallowed the plea of the statute of limitations, and gave the plaintiff a decree of foreclosure for the amount of the debt, on the ground that under the amendment of the code in 1880, enlarging the period of limitations as to “ notes secured by mortgage of real property,” the note in question was not barred by the statute of limitations.

From this judgment the defendant appeals to this court upon the following exceptions: “1. His Honor erred in striking from the answer of defendant the unnumbered section following section three, it not being ‘ matter of. right ’ to plaintiff that same should have been stricken out. 2. His Honor erred in not holding that this action, for foreclosure of a mortgage of real estate, cannot be maintained, the action not having been brought within six years, the time limited for its commencement after the debt matured, as evidenced by the note and by it alone. 3. His Honor erred in holding that the act of December 24th, 1880, applied to the cause of action herein. 4. His Honor erred in not adjudging that the complaint be dismissed. 5. The decree is in other respects misleading and contrary to law.”

As to the first exception, in reference to the order striking out a portion of the answer as irrelevant, it is only necessary to say that matter is irrelevant when it has no substantial relation to the controversy between the parties to the action, and that the code (section 183) provides that “If irrelevant and redundant matter be inserted in a pleading, it may be stricken out on motion of any person aggrieved thereby.” “An answer, otherwise good, may contain a mass of unnecessary or redundant matter, which seems only to encumber the proceedings and conceal or obscure the real issues. In such cases the plaintiff should move for an order striking out such matter as ‘ irrelevant.’ ” 2 Wait Pr. 437.

The other exceptions will be considered together. The old statute of limitations, made of force in this State, did not apply to bonds or other instruments under seal, but in 1870 the Code [480]*480of Civil Procedure was adopted, which, in title 2, under the head of “time of commencing civil actions,” provided as follows :

“Sec. 96. The provisions of this title shall not extend to actions already commenced, or to cases where the right of action has already accrued, but the statutes now of force shall be applicable to such cases.” '
“Sec. 113, Subd. 2. Within twenty years, an action upon a sealed instrument.” In 1873, this provision was amended by adding the words “ other' than notes or personal bonds for the payment of money only, whereof the period of limitations shall be as prescribed in the following section” (that is to say, six years), 15 Stat. 496. In 1880, the provision was again amended by changing the phraseology, as follows: “ An action upon a bond or other contract in writing, secured by a mortgage of real property,” so that said subdivision, with the amendments thereto, shall read as follows: “ Subdivision 2. An action upon a bond or other contract in writing, secured by a mortgage of real property, an action upon a sealed instrument other than a sealed note and personal bond for the payment of money only, whereof the period of limitations shall be the same as prescribed in the following section ” (six years), 17 Stat. 415; Gen. Stat. 1882, Code, §111.

According to these provisions of the law, was the sealed note •secured by a mortgage of real property in this case, barred by the statute of limitations, on January 14th, 1882, when these proceedings were instituted? The note fell due June 5th, 1875, while the amendment of 1873 was the law, making the limitation upon all sealed notes for the payment of money only six years; and as more than that time had elapsed before January, 1882, when the action was commenced, the note was barred by the statute, unless there was some good reason to the contrary. But it is urged that before the bar of the statute was complete, the legislature, on December 24th, 1880, passed the second amendment above referred to, which restored the twenty years as originally provided by the code, as to “ an action upon a bond or other contract in writing, secured by a mortgage of real property,” and that, as the note in this case was so secured, the said [481]*481second amendment included it and had the effect of extending the statute of limitations as to the note before us from six to twenty years. To this was opposed the view that, although the last amendment did change the statute as to notes secured by mortgage of real property, it ivas only prospective in its operation, and did not extend the period of the statute as to any contract made before the passage of the amendment.

Did the amendment include contracts in existence at the time it was passed, or should it be construed as applying only to contracts thereafter to be made ? There is no doubt that the statute ■of limitations relates to the remedy and not to the contract itself, and that the legislature had the power, before the bar was complete, as to contracts then in existence, to extend the time necessary to complete the bar, without impairing the obligation of ■such contracts. The question here, however, is not whether the law-makers had such power, but whether in this case they exercised it. The general rule certainly is that “ statutes are not to be construed retrospectively, or so as to have a retrospective -effect, unless it shall clearly appear that it was so intended by the legislature.” Ex parte Graham, 13 Rich. 277. It may be true, as stated, that statutes' of limitations relate only to the remedy, and are enforced according to the lex fori, that is to say, •according to the law of the State where the party is sued; but we do not understand that these reasons extended the rule so far as to make applicable only the law of force at the time the party is sued.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 S.C. 473, 1883 S.C. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-briggs-sc-1883.