Paine v. Drew

44 N.H. 306
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 1, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 44 N.H. 306 (Paine v. Drew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paine v. Drew, 44 N.H. 306 (N.H. 1860).

Opinions

Sargent, J.

The statute of limitations known as the 21st James I., ch. 16, passed in 1623, and which was in fact in amendment .of and in addition to the statute 32 Henry VHI, ch. 2, passed in 1540, has, among others, the following provision, that if any person, being entitled to any such action, &c., shall be, at the time any such cause of action accrued, “beyond the seas,” then such person shall be at liberty to bring such action within such times as are before limited, after his return from beyond the seas. This statute contained no exception applicable to debtors “ beyond seas,” but only in relation to creditors. But by the statute 4 Anne, ch. 16, the same provisions were made to apply to the defendant if he was “ beyond seas,” namely, that he might, on his return to England, be sued within the times limited by the statute. And the word return in both these statutes was held to include alike the arrival in England of a foreigner who had never been there before, and of a citizen returning from an absence abroad. Duplien v. DeRoven, 2 Vt. 540; Strithorst v. Greame, 2 W. Black. 723; Williams v. Jones, 13 East 448; King v. Walker, 1 W. Black. 286; Lafonde v. Ruddock, 24 E. L. & E. 239; Buckmaboye v. Mattichund, 32 E. L. & E. 84, which is a case in point.

Statutes of limitation have been passed in the several States of the United States, in many of which the term “ beyond seas” has been retained, and it has been held that the term is here equivalent to “ out of the State.” Murray v. Baker, 3 Wheat. 541; Bank of Alexandria v. Dyer, 14 Pet. 141. So in most of the State courts. Ang. on Lim. 210, and cases cited. It is so held in this State; Galusha v. Cobleigh, 13 N. H. 79; though in Pennsylvania it is held to mean out of the limits of the United States. Ward v. Hallam, 1 Yeates 329; Thurston v. Davies, 9 Serg. & R. 285.

The statutes of the States have included in almost every instance some provision that where persons are absent from the State when the cause of action accrued, or afterward, the statute shall not run during such absence, or until such persons return, or unless they leave property in the State; yet it has been held almost uniformly that these words, absence, return, leaving property, &c., are not confined in their application to those who have once been inhabitants, but are equally applicable to those who have never before been in the State ; to foreigners as well as to citizens. It has been so decided in Massachusetts. Bulger v. Roche, 11 Pick. 138 ; Whitney v. Goddard, 20 Pick. 310; Von Homert v. Porter, 11 Met. 210; Brigham v. Bigelow, 12 Met. 270; Putnam v. Dyke, 13 Gray 535. So in New-York: Ruggles v. Keeler, 3 Johns. 263, and cases cited; Cole v. Jessup, 2 Barb. 309; Carpenter v. Wells, 21 Barb. 593. So in Vermont: Dunning v. Chamberlain, 6 Vt. 127; Graves v. Weeks, 19 Vt. 178. And in Connecticut: Hatch v. Spofford, 24 Conn. 432. And in Maine: McMillan v. Wood, 29 Me. 217; Tribodeau v. Levasseur, 36 Me. 362. And in Rhode-Island : Crocker v. Arey, 3 R.I.178. So in Alabama: State Bank v. Seawell, 18 Ala. 616 ; Thompson v. Odum, 23 Ala. 480. And in Arkansas: Wakefield v. Smart, 3 Eng. 488; Field v. Dickinson, 3 Pike 409. And in Mississippi; Estes v. Rawlin, 5 How. 258. And in Mis[315]*315souri: King v. Lane, 7 Mo. 241; Bedford v. Bradford, 8 Mo. 233. And in Pennsylvania: Mullen v. Ridgeway, Addison 278. And in Ohio, until the Legislature, in 1830, enacted that contracts made by non-residents, and barred by the laws of the State where they were made, should be barred in Ohio. North v. Wilson, Wright 152.

In some of the States beside Ohio, we understand that the legislatures have interfered to limit the exception to the statute to residents or those who have once been residents; but we have been unable to find any case where the courts have construed the general law, in the absence of express legislation, in accordance with the defendant’s views, except in the States of New-Jersey and Texas, in the cases cited in the defendant’s brief. It may be a proper matter of legislation, but we regard those decisions relied on by the defendant as in conflict with the great weight of authority, both in England and in America, upon that subject.

It was held in Graves v. Strong, in Vermont, that the tenth section of their statute of limitations, of 1797, providing that in case the defendant, at the time the cause of action accrued, was without the State, the suit might be commenced within six years after his return into the State, extends to a ease where both parties are resident citizens of another State, and the debtor was in that State only for a temporary purpose at the time the writ was served ; and that such action would be sustained, although the cause of action might have been barred at the commencement of the suit, by the statute of limitations of the State of which both parties were then resident citizens.

To the same effect was the decision in Massachusetts, Bulger v. Roche; and by the more recent case in that State, Putnam v. Dyke, it was held that the statute of limitations of that State was no bar to an action brought there on a debt contracted in Vermont more than forty years before. And both parties had lived in Vermont during that period of time, and of course the statute of limitations of Vermont could not be pleaded in Massachusetts.

Ruggles v. Keeler and Carpenter v. Wells, in New-York, are to the same effect; and in Connecticut, the more recent case of Hatch v. Spofford, where the same positions were argued that are here taken by the defendant; and where the statute, like our own, makes no provision for the absence of the plaintiff, decides that the exception in their statutes in favor of debtors who are without the State, is applicable where the cause of action arose in another State, within which both parties then resided, and so continued to reside until after such action was brought.

To be sure, the words used in the exception in the statute of Connecticut are not precisely the same as those used in the exception to our own, but the object to be attained was evidently the same. "We have the proper rule of construction to apply to these statutes of limitation, laid down in Angelí on Limitations 17, where, in speaking of the statute of James, as modified by that of Anne, it is said : “ "Where any difference appears between the provisions of that statute in respect to personal actions, and those of the American statutes of limitation, it is, it will be seen, more in words than [316]*316in substance — tbe end of one and all of them being one and tbe same. If the periods of limitation be different in different countries or States, and in different actions, yet the statutes are drawn with slight variations of phrase, and all being in pari materia, the object and intention being the same, they require a uniform construction.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.H. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-drew-nh-1860.