Southern Pacific Co. v. Prosser

55 P. 145, 122 Cal. 413, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 600
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1898
DocketSac. No. 284
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 55 P. 145 (Southern Pacific Co. v. Prosser) 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
Southern Pacific Co. v. Prosser, 55 P. 145, 122 Cal. 413, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 600 (Cal. 1898).

Opinion

BEATTY, C. J.

This is an action to foreclose a chattel mortgage given to secure the promissory note of the defendant. The complaint was filed more than four years after the maturity of the note, and the superior court held, on demurrer, that the action was barred by the statute of limitations. The judgment of the superior court was reversed in Department on the ground that the note was taken out of the operation of the statute by a new promise or acknowledgment in writing (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 360), but at the same time it was held that the right to foreclose the mortgage was barred. As to this latter point only a rehearing was granted on petition of the appellant. Upon the first point we adopt the Department opinion as follows:

“Plaintiff- sued to foreclose a chattel mortgage made by defendant to secure payment of his promissory note; such note fell due October 10, 1890. The property mortgaged was a certain traction engine at Auburn, Placer county. The action was brought more than four years after maturity of the note, and in order to avoid the limitation of that period prescribed for actions on such instruments (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 337) the plaintiff set out in its complaint the following paper writing alleged to have been signed by defendant and delivered by him on October 8, 1893, to plaintiff’s treasurer, who had authority to receive the same on its behalf: ‘Dear Sir: Eeferring to that traction engine [415]*415at Auburn, owned by me, and mortgaged to S. P. Co., I have not been able -to sell it.....Now, sir, can’t you give me a chance to pay you in work? The company employs many men, and, if you choose, you can procure some employment for me. I have a sick family and am hard up personally and need work and want to pay you besides.....W. S. Prosser.' Defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that the statute bars the action; the demurrer was sustained, and judgment passed in defendant’s favor.
“The distinct and unqualified admission of an existing debt contained in a writing signed by the party to be charged, and without intimation of an intent to refuse payment thereof, suffices to establish the debt to which the contract relates as a continuing contract, and to interrupt the running of the statute of limitations against the same; from such an acknowledgment the law, implies a promise to pay. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 360; McCormick v. Brown, 36 Cal. 180, 184, 185; Biddle v. Brizzolara, 56 Cal. 374; Tuggle v. Minor, 76 Cal. 96; Wood on Limitations, secs. 68, 85.) The defendant contends that his said letter was nothing but an inquiry whether plaintiff would accept payment in work. We think it was more significant than this; as we read the document it was an unqualified admission of an existing debt which defendant desired to pay, and also a request for leave to pay in a manner more convenient to the writer than that provided in the original contract. The suggestion of a peculiar mode of payment, not being proposed as a condition of the acknowledgment, did not impair the effect of the admission. (Evans v. Simon, 9 Ex. 282.) This view of the import of defendant’s letter is strengthened—'strongly fortified,’ said the supreme court of New Hampshire—by the fact that the bar of the statute was then some two years remote, and defendant was in no position to impose terms of payment (Butterfield v. Jacobs, 15 N. H. 140, 142; Wood on Limitations, sec. 78, and cases cited); to the extent of the value of the security at least, payment was then enforceable in money. 'There is a great difference between the construction to be put on a letter written a short time after the debt has been contracted and one written after the debt is already barred’ (Pollock, C. B., in Cornforth v. Smithhard, 5 Hurl. & N. 14.) We [416]*416have no doubt that the latter interrupted the running of the statute as to the debt sued on. (See, further, Farrell v. Palmer, 36 Cal. 187; Curtiss v. Aetna Ins. Co., 90 Cal. 245, 249, 255.)”

As to the second point, it was assumed in the Department opinion that the life of the original mortgage ended four years after the maturity of the note, and that the written acknowledgment of the debt, though sufficient to prevent the bar of the statute as to the personal obligation, was not such an instrument as is essential to create, renew or extend a mortgage. The contention of the appellant is, that this view ignores the effect of section 2911 of the Civil Code, which reads as follows: “A lien is extinguished by the lapse of the time within which, under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, an action can be brought upon the principal obligation.”

The code prescribes the manner of creating liens, and enumerates the various means by which they are extinguished. (Civ. Code, secs. 2909-2913.) This enumeration is no doubt intended to be exclusive, and the only provision applicable to this case is section 2911, above quoted. The question whether the lien of this mortgage was extinguished, therefore, resolves itself into the question whether an action such as this is based upon the principal obligation—i. e., the note which the mortgage was given to secure—or upon the new promise implied from the written acknowledgment of the debt. A wide diversity of opinion upon this point may be discovered in the reported decisions of this court, but it is to be observed that these expressions of opinion were generally unnecessary, and have generally ignored the distinction between a new promise made before and one made after the statute has run. The distinction is very clearly stated in section 81 of Wood on Limitations, as follows:

“The distinction between the acknowledgment of a debt before and one after the statute has run consists merely in its effect upon the debt and the remedy. An acknowledgment or promise made before the statute has run vitalizes the old debt for another statutory period dating from the time of the acknowledgment or promise, while an acknowledgment made after the statute has run gives a new cause of action, for which the old debt is a eonáderation.”

This distinction seems to be recognized in the phrase “new [417]*417or continuing contract” in section 360 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and is clearly stated by Mr. Justice Rhodes in his opinion in McCormick v. Brown, supra, as follows: “There are two ultimate facts that may be proved in the mode prescribed—a continuing contract and a new contract. The acknowledgment or promise made while the contract is a subsisting liability establishes a continuing contract; and, when made after the bar of the statute^ a new contract is created.”

In Smith v. Richmond, 19 Cal. 477, it was held that the new promise is not the cause of action, but is only evidence that the original cause of action is not barred.

In Chabot v. Tucker, 39 Cal. 438, Mr. Justice Temple says in his opinion that Smith v. Richmond, supra, was overruled in McCormick v. Brown, supra, as to this point.

I think it is too strong an expression to say that the earlier decision was overruled by the latter, for it was not mentioned or referred to, and the two cases were not alike. In the former, the new promise was made before the bar of the statute had attached to the original obligation, while in McCormick v. Brown, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
55 P. 145, 122 Cal. 413, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-co-v-prosser-cal-1898.