Spring v. Gray

22 F. Cas. 978, 5 Mason C.C. 305
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedOctober 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 F. Cas. 978 (Spring v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spring v. Gray, 22 F. Cas. 978, 5 Mason C.C. 305 (circtdme 1830).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

The present case in the actual posture, in which it is presented to the court, resolves itself purely into a question of law; and has. accordingly, been so argued by the parties. And I shall at once proceed to declare the opinion, which I have formed on the point, and if the parties are dissatisfied with it, it is a great consolation to me, that the amount in controversy is sufficiently large to enable them to have it revised by the supreme court upon a bill of exceptions.

I own myself to be one of those, who consider the statute of limitations a highly beneficial statute, and entitled, as such, to receive, if not a liberal, at least a reasonable construction, in furtherance of its manifest object. It is a statute of repose; the object of which, is to suppress fraudulent and stale claims from springing up at great distances of time, and surprising the parties, or their [985]*985representatives, when all the proper vouchers ■and evidences are lost, or the facts have become obscure, from the lapse of time, or the •defective memory, or death, or removal of witnesses. The defence therefore, which it puts forth, is an honorable defence, which does not seek to avoid the payment of just claims and demands, admitted now to be due; but which encounters in the only practicable manner such as are ancient and unacknowledged; and, whatever may have been their original validity, such as are now beyond the power of the party to meet, with all the proper vouchers and evidence to repel them. The natural presumption certainly is, that claims which have been long neglected, are unfounded, or at least, are no longer subsisting demands. And this presumption, the •statute has erected into a positive bar. There is wisdom and policy in it, as it quickens the diligence of creditors, and guards innocent persons from being betrayed by their ignorance, or their over confidence in regard to transactions, which have become dim by age. Yet I well remember the time, when courts ■of law exercised what I cannot but deem a most unseemly anxiety to suppress the de-fence; and when, to the reproach of the law, ■almost every effort of ingenuity was exhausted to catch up loose and inadvertent phrases from the careless lips of the supposed debtor, to construe them into admissions of the debt. Happily, that period has passed away; and judges now confine themselves to the more -appropriate duty of construing the statute, rather than devising means to evade its oper•ation.

It appears to me also, that it is the duty of the court to adhere to the very terms of the ■statute, and not, upon imaginary equitable considerations, to escape from the positive •declarations of the text. No exceptions ought to be made, unless they are found therein; and if there are any inconveniences or hardships growing out of such a construction, it is for the legislature, which is fully competent for that purpose, and not for the court, •to apply tiie proper remedy. The statute of •limitations of Maine (Laws 1821, c. 62) enacts that “all actions of account and upon the case, other than such accounts as concern the trade of merchandise between merchant and merchant, their factors, or servants, &c., shall be commenced and sued, &c. within six years next after the cause of such actions and suits, ■and not after.” The statute is pleaded in bar of the present suit, and the replication is, that it is a case of “merchants’ accounts” within the exception, upon which the parties are at issue. And the question is, whether the facts prevent a case within the exception of merchants’ accounts in the statute. The Maine statute is a mere transcript on this head of that of 21 Jac. I. c. 16. Upon that ¡statute, an early doubt arose whether any -other actions than actions of account were within the exception. The earliest decisions confined the exception to mere actions of ae-count, which were at that time the common remedy for unsettled accounts. So it was held in Farrington v. Lee, 1 Mod. 269, 2 Mod. 312, and for a considerable time afterwards. Chevely v. Bond, Carth. 226, 4 Mod. 105; 1 Show. 341; Martin v. Delboe, 1 Mod. 71. But the doctrine is now well established, that it applies to actions of assumpsit, as well as of account. See 2 Saund. 125, etc., and notes 6 and 7 of Serg. Williams; Peake, 164; Mandeville v. Wilson, 5 Cranch [9 U. S.] 15. The exception was undoubtedly made for the benefit of merchants, and probably had principally in view cases of foreign trade, carried on through the instrumentality of factors and agents; for there was at that time very little inland commerce in the kingdom of England. In the course of such transactions, accounts would naturally arise, which, from the distance of the parties,- might remain unsettled for many years. In Webber v. Tivill, 2 Saund. 125, Jones, who argued for the defendant, and whose argument was adopted by the court, said, — “The reason was, because it often happens that merchants, who are as partners, or hold correspondence one with the other in several parts of the world, may have accounts current between them for several years before they have an opportunity of meeting to state their accounts, and therefore the statute does not mean to limit their accounts.” Every part of the exception is equally material; and it is not sufficient, that a plaintiff brings himself within one part of the description, if all parts are not applicable to him, in the predicament in which he stands before the court. He must by his replication aver, that it is a case of accounts; of accounts, which concern the trade of merchandise; of accounts between merchant.and merchant, their factors, or servants.

In the first place, it must be a case of accounts. The saving, as has been justly remarked long ago, is not of actions, but of accounts. Webber v. Tivill, 2 Saund. 125; 1 Mod. 269, 270. The statute did not mean to except actions generally, between merchants, &e., but only such actions as respected accounts. This is the natural interpretation of the text, and it is confirmed by the preceding words; for the action of account, out of which the exception is carved, is founded solely on cases lying in account. The case, therefore, must be such as is properly matter of account, and not any special contract, which the party may afterwards throw into the shape of an account. The action of account at the common law lay only against bailiffs, receivers, guardians, and partners in trade, and other persons standing in the like relation, who received goods, merchandises, monies, &c., of the other party, to render an .account thereof. But it was never supposed, that a special contract, which might alternately require an examination of accounts, or might be pressed into that shape, was within the reach of the exception. We must understand the statute, in its obvious sense, as [986]*986saving accounts proper; that is, such as consist of debits and credits,.properly arising in account, and not as saving all eases, where one man is accountable to another for his performance or non-performance of a special contract. That was so decided in Chevely v. Bond, Carth. 226, where a suit was brought on a bill of exchange, and there was a replication, to a plea of the statute, of merchants’ accounts. But the court held, that bills of exchange for value received, are not such matters of accounts as are intended by the exception. The true object was to save such accounts only, for which an action of account would lie. It may be necessary in many eases, to make out an account, in order to decide a claim arising upon a contract; but that will not make it a matter of account.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 978, 5 Mason C.C. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-v-gray-circtdme-1830.