Norton v. Larco

30 Cal. 126
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 30 Cal. 126 (Norton v. Larco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norton v. Larco, 30 Cal. 126 (Cal. 1866).

Opinion

By the Court, Currey, C. J.:

This action was brought to recover nine hundred and twenty-nine dollars, the balance due from the defendants to the plaintiffs upon an account for work performed and materials furnished in and about such work. The defendant Bassignano answered, pleading a discharge from his debts by the decree of a Court of competent jurisdiction. The defendant Larco, by his answer, traversed the material allegations of the complaint, and as an affirmative defense pleaded the Statute of Limitations. The cause was tried by the Court without a jury, and judgment was found for the defendant Bassignano on his plea of discharge from his debts as an insolvent debtor, and judgment was rendered against the defendant Larco for the sum above named and the costs of the action. From this judgment and an order afterward made denying the defendant Larco’s application for a new trial, he has appealed.

The plaintiff’s account, which consisted of over tlfree hundred and fifty items, extending from early in October, 1858, to and including the 24th of October, 1860, was for work per[129]*129formed and materials furnished by them as blacksmiths and machinists. The whole account amounted to the sum of sixteen hundred and forty-five dollars and twenty-five cents. The same account exhibits five credits by cash and one by a “ horse power,” the value of which is carried out at one hundred and fifty dollars. The credits in the aggregate amount to seven hundred and sixteen dollars and seventy-five cents. The evidence in the case was that the items of the account were delivered and the services rendered at the times specified in the account, by the plaintiffs for the defendants; also, that the account was true and correct as rendered, showing a balance of nine hundred and twenty-nine dollars due the plaintiffs from the defendants for labor and service and materials furnished between the 12th of October, 1858, and the 24th of October, 1860, inclusive.

The action was commenced on the 23d of October, 1862. The last item of the account is under date of October 24th, 1860. This is the only item falling within two years before the commencement of the action. The credits by cash bear dates at different times while the account was running, and the credit by one horse power, valued at one hundred and fifty dollars, is entered at the foot of the account, and is dated October, 1859.

The Court decided that there was a mutual, open and current account existing between the parties, and that as the last item of the plaintiffs’ account accrued within two years before the commencement of the suit,, the plaintiffs’ cause of action accrued at that time, and that as a consequence they were entitled to judgment for the amount due as exhibited by the account rendered. The correctness of this decision is controverted by the appellant.

Statute of Limitations on accounts.

The eighteenth section of the “Act defining the time for commencing civil actions ” (Laws 1850, p. 345,) reads as follows : “ In an action brought to recover a balance due upon a [130]*130mutual, open and current account, where there have been reciprocal demands bétween the parties, the cause of action shall be deemed to have accrued from the time of the last item proved in the account on either side.”

To bring the case within the saving of the statute it must appear, first, that the account between the parties consisted of reciprocal demands; second, that the same was open, as contradistinguished from an account stated; and third, that it consisted of different items of different dates, or in other words that it was a current account. Mutual accounts are made up of matters of set-off. There must be a mutual credit founded on a subsisting debt on the other side, or an express or an implied agreement for a set-off of mutual debts. A natural equity arises when there are mutual credits between the parties, or where there is an existing debt on one side which constitutes a credit on the other; or where there is an express or implied understanding, that mutual debts shall be a satisfaction or set-off jpro tanto between the parties. (Angell on Lim., Chap. 14, Sec. 7.) Was there a subsisting debt against the defendants when they delivered to the plaintiffs the chattel called a “ horse power,” which the latter received at a specified value, crediting the defendants for it ? Of this no question is made or doubt suggested. Then upon the delivery of the horse power to the plaintiffs the same became a matter of account in favor of the defendants against the plaintiffs, and until the account between the parties might be stated and the balance struck, it stood as a set-off pro tanto to the demand of the plaintiffs. (Gass v. Stinson, 3 Sumner, 114, 115.) Where there are demands on each side, the striking of a balance converts the set-off into payment, (Ashby v. James, 11 Mees. and Welsby, 542,) and from the time the balance is ascertained by the parties and is admitted to be due from the one to the other, the account is at an end, and the ascertained balance is immediately subjected to the operation of the statute, as an original and separate demand. (Angell on Lim., Chap. 14, Sec. 8.) The account between the parties had not been stated at the time this action was brought. It was then open "and current. [131]*131It was also mutual, because each party had a demand against the other which remained subsisting and unliquidated.

Proof of mutual account.

The appellants’ counsel raise the point that it does not appear that defendants had an account against the plaintiffs. The testimony of the absent witness, agreed upon and admitted by stipulation, was to the effept that “ the account is true and correct as rendered, showing a balance of nine hundred and twenty-nine dollars due the plaintiffs from the defendants, for labor and services and materials rendered between the 12th of October, 1858, and the 24th of October, 1860, inclusive.” This account exhibited the several credits given the defendants by the plaintiffs, as already mentioned. These credits entered into the account by whitfi the plaintiffs’ demand was reduced over seven hundred dollars. The credit for the horse power was recognized as correct, because by rejecting it the balance due the plaintiffs would have been one thousand and seventy-nine dollars, instead of nine hundred and twenty-nine dollars. In our judgment, the objection suggested is overcome by the stipulated testimony.

The case of Weatherwax and others v. The Cosumnes Valley Mill Company, 17 Cal. 345, is relied on by the appellant as sustaining his defense. That was an action on an open account. The defendants interposed the Statute of Limitations, to avoid which the plaintiffs sought to show that the transactions between the parties constituted a mutual, open and current account, consisting of reciprocal demands between them. The evidence in the case was that the defendant delivered to the plaintiffs a lump of gold amalgam, to be by them sent to the Mint, and after the return of the proceeds the defendant was to be credited therewith. The proceeds, the Court say, were paid to the plaintiffs and credited on the account. The question was, whether the payment of the proceeds—that is, the money which was obtained from the Mint—constituted in part a mutual, open and current account between the parties, and the Court held that it did not, because the account lacked the [132]*132quality of reciprocity. The account was entirely upon one side.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Cal. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-larco-cal-1866.