Sanger v. Nightingale

122 U.S. 176, 7 S. Ct. 1109, 30 L. Ed. 1105, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2098
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 23, 1887
Docket228
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 122 U.S. 176 (Sanger v. Nightingale) 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
Sanger v. Nightingale, 122 U.S. 176, 7 S. Ct. 1109, 30 L. Ed. 1105, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2098 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller,

after stating the case as reported above, delivered the opinion of the court.

Two questions are presented for consideration on the pleadings in the case. The first of these may be said to be this *183 plea of‘ the statute of limitations; the second, the question of actual fraud in the foreclosure of the Spalding mortgage, and the transfer of title thereby to the children of Phineas M. Nightingale.

As regards the statute, of limitations, it is observable that the foreclosure suit was brought in < the name of Spalding, the original mortgagee, for the use of Johnston, administrator of the estate of Molyneux, for reasons explained by the attorneys who brought it. The' suit was against Phineas M. Nightingale himself, who lived until the whole proceeding was ended and the property sold, and who died a few months afterwards. The proper, if not the only, 'time and place that this statute of limitations could have been pleaded was in that suit. Nightingale himself, who was the débtor and was in possession and had no equitable defence against the debt for which a judgment at law had been already obtained against him in one of the courts of Georgia, did not plead the statute of limitations. It would hardly be insisted by anybody that-he was under any personal, legal or moral obligation to plead that statute. He had obtained from Mrs. Molyneux a very favorable settlement-of a debt of over one hundred thousand dollars. Dunginess, which was accepted at the price of $25,000, is stated in the oral testimony to have been sold not long afterwards for $15,000. The value of the slaves was. adjusted on* some fair basis, and corresponding deduction was made on that account, so that the sum of $51,250, which was yet due on the mortgage, was in every sense an honorable and just debt which Nightingale owed to the estate of Molyneux, and a plea of the statute of limitations to that debt, if it could have been sustained after the payments-made upon it, within the period of limitation, would have been an unjust exercise of Nis right to make such a plea which could only result in favor of the plaintiff Sanger.

The right to plead the statute of limitations has been always held to be a personal privilege, of which the debtor could avail himself or not, as he might choose. See Pitman's Administratrix v. Elder et al. in the Supreme Court of Georgia,. March Term, 1886.

*184 It is true there are some authorities which go to show that a purchaser with the legal title, whose right'accrued subsequent to the debt which may be barred by the statute, can also avail himself of the statute when he is sued to foreclose this equity of redemption. While this proposition is not undisputed, the cases in which this privilege has been sustained by the courts of Georgia are those in which the party setting it up has become the owner of the title or the entire equity of redemption, or has been found in possession of the mortgaged property.

And in the case of Ewell v. Daggs, 108 U. S. 143, this court said that, though the subsequent purchaser might set up the plea of the statute, the plea must show that the action is barred as belmeen the parties to the debt, because as the owner of the equity of redemption it is that debt he has to pay.

The statute of limitations applicable to this case is § 6 of the act of March 16, 1869, Pamph. Laws Geo. 1869, p. 133, which reads as follows:

“ That all other actions upon contracts, express or implied, or upon any debt or liability whatsoever to the public, or a corporation, or a private individual or individuals, which accrued prior to 1st June, 1865, and are not now barred, shall be brought by 1st January, 1870, or both the right and right of action to enforce it shall be forever barred.”

This being a law of the state of Georgia, we must follow its construction by the courts of that state, so far as it has been construed. It is said in the argument in this case, but not much insisted upon by the plaintiffs, that this is a peremptory discharge of the debt, and is not a mere statute of limitations, which, to be available, must be pleaded, as is the case with other limitation acts. The proposition is, that the statute in effect destroys the right of action, but this doctrine has been overruled repeatedly by the Supreme Court of Georgia, in which it has been held to be an ordinary statute of limitations. See George v. Gardner, 49 Geo. 441, 449; Harris v. Gray, 49 Geo. 585. In Parker v. Irvin, 47 Geo. 405, it was decided that the pleading of the statute was only a personal privilege of the debtor, and that to avail himself of the stat *185 ute he must plead it. See also Baker and wife v. Bush, 25 Geo. 594

The mortgagee of real estate in Georgia does not take the title to the property. The mortgage is only a security for the debt for which it is made. The title remains in the mortgagor. The cases in that state, as already intimated, go no further than to hold that a purchaser of the legal title, or possibly a .mortgagee in possession, may,-when sued, plead the' statute of limitations as a defence to a prior debt, or mortgage, or incumbrance, made by the holder of the legal title.

In the case before us Sanger never had the possession, never had the legal title, and, as he was no party to the foreclosure proceedings, which he now contests, he simply stands upon such rights as his mortgage lien gives him against Nightingale. It is difficult to see from what standpoint he, in this suit, in which he is complainant, seeking to foreclose his own mortgage, can set up the statute of limitations, not as a defence, for he is not sued and nobody is troubling him about his claim, but as a positive weapon to set aside and annul in this collateral proceeding the decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, with proper parties before it, which foreclosed a mortgage prior in time and equal in equity to his, under which the property was sold and passed into other hands. Certainly the court which rendered that decree had jurisdiction of the property and of Nightingale, the defendant, who was in possession, and who had the legal title. It is equally as certain that whether Nightingale ought to have pleaded the statute or not, he diet not do so, and it is now too late to set it up as a defence to that suit. If Nightingale himself had made that plea, it is difficult to perceive how he could have avoided the effect of part payment by the transfer -of Dunginess and an acknowledgment of the debt by the settlement under which it was adjusted at $51,250, as a sufficient answer to the plea of the "statute of limitations. "We suppose, though no authorities are cited on the subject, that the law of Georgia, like that of other' states, admits of such evidence as payment, acknowledgment of the debt, and agreement to pay, as being a sufficient reply to the statute of limitations. How Nightingale *186 could have pleaded the statute successfully under such circumstances we do not see.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 U.S. 176, 7 S. Ct. 1109, 30 L. Ed. 1105, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanger-v-nightingale-scotus-1887.