Shoemaker v. . Benedict

11 N.Y. 176
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 11 N.Y. 176 (Shoemaker v. . Benedict) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shoemaker v. . Benedict, 11 N.Y. 176 (N.Y. 1854).

Opinions

Allen, J.

The plaintiff in this action relies upon payments by one of several makers of a promissory note, made before the statute of limitations had barred an action upon it, to take the case out of the statute as to all the makers, and continue the joint liability of all for six years from the time of the last of such payments.

Before the decision of Van Keuren v. Parmelee, (2 Comst. 523,) it would have been considered very well settled upon authority that such payments did operate to prevent the statute of limitations from attaching to the demand; that by the joint contract, there was a unity of interest, by which a quasi agency was created between the contractors, so that the admission or promise of one would have bound all. ( Whitcomb v. Whiting, Doug. 652; Patterson v. Choate, 7 Wend. 441; Hammon v. Huntley, 4 Cowen, 493; Johnson v. Beardsley, 15 John. 3; 6 John. Ch. 291; Sigourney v. Drury, 14 Pick. 387; Perkins v. Raynal, 2 Bing. 306 ; Burleigh v. Stott, 8 B. & C. 36; Pease v. Hurst, 10 id. 122; Wyatt v. Hudson, 8 Bing. 309; Frye v. Barker, 4 Pick. 382; Hunt v. Bridgham, 2 id. 581; White v. Hale, 3 id. 291; Channel v. Ditchburn, 5 M. & W. 494; Griffin v. Ashley, 1 Car. & P. 139 ; Rew v. Petet, 1 A. & E. 196; Greenleaf v. Quincey, 3 Fairf, R. 11; Pike v. Warren, 15 Maine, 393 ; Joslyn v. Smith, 13 Verm. 356; Shelton v. Cocke, Munf. 311; Besley v. Fuller, 1 McCord, 541; 2 Bay, 533.)

While the decision of Van Keuren v. Parmelee does not decide the precise point presented by the case before us, it involved *174 principles which were necessarily decided, and which have an important bearing, if not a controlling influence, upon the decision of this cause. The judge who pronounced the opinion of the court in that case, refers to the distinctions supposed to exist between that case and this, but did not profess to lay much stress upon them. He did not, however, undertake to decide whether there were or were not distinctions between the two cases which would influence the decision, and bring them within different rules. His argument was adapted to the settlement of general principles, and the application of those principles to the case then under consideration; and he designedly left the question open as to what other cases those principles should govern, and what facts and circumstances would operate to place a case in other respects similar to that decided, without the rule then established. But the court in that case, as the court of last resort in the state, reviewed a series of decisions of the courts of this state and of others and of England, and established as the law of this state, principles inconsistent with many of the cases which have been followed by our courts as law, and has in some respects made the law more self-consistent. They have adopted, to a great extent, the views of Mr. Justice Story, as expressed in Bell v. Morrison, (1 Peters, 351,) which the supreme court of this state, acting upon the principle of stare decisis, had not considered proper to do. (Dean v. Hewit, 5 Wend. 257.)

The cases cited above, in which it has been held that the promise of one joint debtor was sufficient to take the case out of the statute of limitations and revive or continue the debt as against all, have followed the decision of Whitcomb v. Whiting, and have merely applied the principle of that case to cases substantially the same, or supposed to be so, and only differing in circumstances. They have depended upon the presumed agency of one to do an act to bind the other debtors, growing out of the joinder in the contract and unity of interest. The leading case was decided at a time when the statute of limitations was looked upon with disfavor by the courts, and when any acknowledgment, even the slightest, of the existence of a debt, was sufficient to *175 deprive the party of the benefit of the statute, although the acknowledgment was made under circumstances showing that the debtor did not intend to recognize or admit an existing intention or liability to pay. (Freeman v. Fenton, Cowp. 548 ; Bryan v. Horseman, 4 East, 599 ; Lawrence v. Worrall, Peake, 93 ; Beecher v. Hannay, 4 East, 599, n. c; Clark v. Bradshall, 3 Esp. 155.) The courts were willing to lay hold of any circumstance which tended to show the existence of a demand, or that a demand once existing had not been paid, to take the case out of the statute; and hence perhaps they were the more ready to imply an agency which would not have been implied for any other purpose or under any other circumstances, and bind one person by the acts of another, whom he never designed to constitute his agent for any purpose, and to hold that a partial payment by one, as it negatived to some extent the presumption of a prior payment of the debt, was evidence against all that the debt had not been paid and was an existing liability. The statute was treated as raising a presumption of payment, and that presumption being rebutted, the statute was treated as no bar. The early cases in England upon this subject have not been generally followed in this country, and are no longer considered as law in that country; but the statute of limitations has been treated not as merely raising a presumption of payment, but as a statute of repose. It has been held that a circumstance or expression from which a probable or possible inference could be drawn of the acknowledgment of a debt was not sufficient to overcome the defense under it. (Sands v. Gelston, 15 John. 511; Wetzell v. Bussard, 11 Wheat. 309; Bangs v. Hall, 2 Pick. 368.) It is now held that there must be an express promise or a clear recognition of the present existence of the demand, from which a promise may be implied. (Stafford v. Richardson, 15 Wend.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.Y. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoemaker-v-benedict-ny-1854.