Ross v. Jones

89 U.S. 576, 22 L. Ed. 730, 22 Wall. 576, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1287
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 11, 1875
Docket104
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 89 U.S. 576 (Ross v. Jones) 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
Ross v. Jones, 89 U.S. 576, 22 L. Ed. 730, 22 Wall. 576, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1287 (1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Two errors are assigned, as follows:

1st. That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the plaintiffs to the rejoinder filed by the defendant to the plaintiffs’ replication to the first special plea of the defendant.

2d. That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer of the plaintiffs to the third plea of the defendant.

I. Unsealed written contracts are barred by the statute of limitations of that State in five years from maturity, and it appears that the note described in the declaration matured on the first of November next after its date, but the record shows that the indorser deceased on the fifteenth of November, 1869, leaviug the note unpaid and outstanding. Under the laws of the State the general statute of limitations runs from the maturity of the contract to the granting of administration upon the estate of the decedent, when the general statute ceases to run and the statute of limitations applicable to the estates, of deceased persons begins to run.

*586 Hence the defendant pleaded that the cause of action did not accrue to the plaintiffs at any time within five years next before the grant of letters of administration upon the estate of the deceased indorser.

War, when duly declared or recognized as such by the war-making power, imports a prohibition to the «subjects or citizens of all commercial intercourse aud all correspondence with citizens or persons domiciled in the enemy country. Total inability, therefore, on the part of an enemy creditor to sustain any contract in the tribunals of the other belligerent, exists by the law of nations during the continuance of the war, but the restoration of peace removes the disability and opens the doors of the courts.

Unquestioned right to sue is the status of the creditor if the contract was made during peace, but the effect of war is to suspend the right, not only without any fault on the part of the creditor, but under circumstances which make it his duty to abstain from any such attempt. His remedy is suspended by the acts of the two governments and by the law of nations, not applicable to the contract at its date, but which comes into operation in consequence of an event over which he has no control. *

Peace, it is said, restores the right and the remedy, but as that cannot be if the statute of limitations continues to run during the period the creditor is rendered incapable of suing, it necessarily follows that the operation of the statute is also suspended during the same period.

Attempt is made to distinguish the case before the court from the case in which that rule of decision was first promulgated by this court, but it is clear that the attempt must be unsuccessful, as the same doctrines have since been applied in a case where a mortgagee, who was a citizen and resident of one of the Confederate States, brought a suit after the close of the war upon a bond and mortgage executed prior to the war by citizens of one of the loyal States, and the court held that the period from the proelama *587 tion of the blockade to the proclamation that the war was closed, must be deducted in the computation of the time which the statute of limitations of the loyal State had run against the right of action. *

Extended discussion of that topic is quite unnecessary, as the oft-repeated decisions of this court have established the rule that the statute of limitations was suspended in the rebellious States during the existence of the late rebellion, and the express decision of this court is that the war was flagrant in that State for the whole period specified in the replication filed by the plaintiff's.

Viewed in the light of that decision it is clear that the rejoinder filed by the defendant is insufficient and that the ruling of the Circuit Court adjudging it bad was correct.

II. Due demand of the maker, protest, and notice to the indorser of non-payment are admitted, and it is alleged that the indorser subsequently, by a certain notice in writing, required the plaintiffs, as holders of the note, to sue the maker and the indorser at a time when the maker was solvent and able to pay the same, and that the plaintiffs omitted for more than thirty days to comply with the terms of the notice, during which time the maker became insolvent.

Based on these facts the second defence set up is that the indorser was discharged by the neglect of the holders of the note to comply with the terms of that notice, which must depend in a great measure upon the nature of the obligation that the iudorser assumed by his contract of indorsement. If the holder of a negotiable promissory note does anj'thing, the effect of which is to suspend, impair, or destroy the right of the prior parties to indemnity from those otherwise liable over to them, he cannot resort to the parties affected by his conduct to make good the default of the maker of the instrument. §

*588 Simple indulgence, however, or mere delay to enforce payment, without a binding contract to give time, will not, under the general rules of commercial law, have that effect, even in the case of a party occupying strictly the contract relation of a surety. *

Indorsers, it is sometimes said, are sureties, but their contract, which is a new one as compared with the maker of the note,- differs in some important respects from that of the surety, who is a joint promisor with the principal, as the holder of such an instrument is under no obligation to use diligence to enforce payment against the maker in order to hold the indorser.

Even in a case where the holder of a promissory note was, after the note fell due, called upon by the indorser to prosecute the maker, of whom the amount might then have been collected, but who afterwards became insolvent, and the holder neglected to do as requested, still it is held that such neglect will not discharge the indorser.

Judicial decisions of high authoi’ity dexxy that the indorser is to be regarded as a surety after his liability is fixed by due presentment, demand, and notice of the dishonor of the note, and insist that when his liability is fixed by those acts of the holder, that he, the indoi’ser, becomes a pi’ineipal debtor himself, subject only to the condition that the holder shall do no act to suspend, impair, or destroy his x’emedy over against prior parties to whom he has a right to resort for a remedy; and suppox-t to that view is certainly derived from the conceded fact that the indorser is answerable upon an independent contract, which makes it his legal duty to *589

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 U.S. 576, 22 L. Ed. 730, 22 Wall. 576, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-jones-scotus-1875.