Taylor v. Slater

41 A. 1001, 21 R.I. 104, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 23, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 41 A. 1001 (Taylor v. Slater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Slater, 41 A. 1001, 21 R.I. 104, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 18 (R.I. 1898).

Opinion

Stiness, J.

The complainant, a married woman, brings this bill to enforce the payment of a promissory note, on demand, against the representatives of the estate of Earl' P. Mason and William S. Slater, deceased, and legatees and heirs of said Mason and Slater. The note, for the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, was given to her August 3, 1872, for money advanced out of her estate to the firm of Taylor & Wright, of Chicago, the firm consisting of Erank C. Taylor, her husband, and John W. Wright, both of Chicago, and also of said Mason and Slater of this State. Soon after the date of the note the firm ceased to do business, and said Taylor and Wright were then and since have been insolvent.

Earl P. Mason died intestate, September 21, 1876, and William S. Slater died testate, May 22, 1882.

The complainant commenced an action against the surviving partners October 7, 1892, in Illinois, and recovered judgment, on which execution was returned nulla bona.

This bill was filed April 26, 1897, to which the respondents demur.

(1) We cannot consider the first two grounds of demurrer, that the note was void in Illinois prior to 1874, and that the separate estate of a married woman must be derived from persons other than her husband, for the reason that courts do not take judicial cognizance of the statutes of other States, and hence, to raise a question of law before trial they must be set up by pleading. O'Reilly v. N. Y. & N. E. R. R. Co., 16 R. I. 388.

The third ground of demurrer is based upon the statute of limitations and laches.

(2) In a former suit upon this note, which is referred to in the bill, this complainant alleged that the note was negotiated at *106 the Fourth National Bank of Chicago, and that her trustee purchased said note two days afterwards ; and that January 1, 1876, the firm gave another note to her for interest then due. Upon these allegations we held that the note for $25,-000 was barred, because the statute having begun to run, while the note was in the 'hands of the bank, it continued to run after it came to her possession ; the alleged new promise operating only to suspend the bar, and not to create a new cause of action. We also held that the second note was not barred, because it was given to the complainant while under the disability of coverture. Taylor v. Slater, 16 R. I. 86. According to that decision the statute of limitations does not apply to this bill, because the complainant now avers that the note was delivered directly to herself, a married woman. Strictly, statutes of limitations are applicable only to courts of law ; but, as a rule, equity follows the law in this respect, for the reason that one should not be allowed to enforce a claim in equit}^ which, upon grounds of public policy, could not be enforced at law. This doctrine, in equity generalized as laches, is of a broader scope than a statute. As Story says : “There are cases in which the statutes would be a bar at law, but in which equity would, notwithstanding, grant relief ; and, on the other hand, there are cases where the statutes would not be a bar at law, but where equity, notwithstanding, would refuse relief.” 1 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 64 a.

(3) Equity does not favor stale claims, and will not assist one who has slept upon his rights, and shows no excuse for his laches, in asserting them. Lane v. Locke, 150 U. S. 193-201.

The defence may be taken on demurrer, where it appears in the bill, or by plea or answer. Warren v. Prov. Tool Co., 19 R. I. 360; Cammack v. Carpenter, 3 App. D. C. 219; Kerfoot v. Billings, 160 Ill. 563.

The defence may also be set up in argument; Woodmanse v. Williams, 37 U. S. App. 109; and even on suggestion of the court. Chase v. Chase, 19 R. I. 523.

The rule as stated in the latter case, reported in 20 R. I. *107 202, is that the delay must be such as works a disadvantage to another.' Applying that rule to the present case, we find that the bill sets out a note about twenty-five years old ; that after the death of Mr. Mason, in 1876, and after the death of Mr. Slater, in 1882, no suit was brought upon the note against the copartnership until 1892, although the partners Taylor and Wright were “totally and completely insolvent.” The bill alleges that there are now no assets of any kind of said partnership estate, but it does not allege that there were none when the firm ceased to do business or that the complainant made any effort to collect the debt from said firm, beyond making a demand for payment. The averments of a loan of such large amount to a firm of which the complainant’s husband was the senior partner, just on the verge of its collapse, with no effort of any kind to collect it for at least twelve years and after the death of the only responsible partners, nor to secure judgment against the firm until twenty years had passed, and then only because under our law it was held to be a condition precedent to a bill against the representatives of deceased partners, Taylor v. Slater, 17 R. I. 801, present a case which is calculated to shock a court of equity by its mere statement. It is manifest, upon such a statement, that executors, administrators, and heirs must be at a great disadvantage, after the lapse now of over twenty-five years, in proving the conditions of the loan, the assets, and the transactions of the partnership with the complainant, or in disproving the fact of the loan itself. While Mason or Slater were alive, who would be supposed to know about those things, the complainant was silent. But, in addition to all this, the bill directs our attention to the fact, already mentioned, that the complainant makes a vital change in her allegations as to the issue of the note from those in her former bill. For such delay, with such natural results, not a word of explanation or excuse is offered. The coverture of the complainant did not prevent a suit, for our statutes have all along enabled a married woman to sue through a trustee.

*108 (4) *107 The only suggestion of a justification for her long delay is *108 the allegation that she is not and has not been guilty of any laches in the premises as she is, by a decree of this court, entered December 17, 1892, permitted to pursue her remedy against the respondent without prejudice to the complainant’s right to any remedy to which she might be' entitled upon said note of $25,000 against the said respondents, provided she should first pursue her claim against said Frank C. Taylor and John M. Wright, surviving partners, to final judgment and execution, as required by statute, which was the ground of dismissal of the suit.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A. 1001, 21 R.I. 104, 1898 R.I. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-slater-ri-1898.