Walker v. Knight

12 Ohio St. (N.S.) 209
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio St. (N.S.) 209 (Walker v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Knight, 12 Ohio St. (N.S.) 209 (Ohio 1861).

Opinion

Brinkerhoff, J.

This is a petition in error filed here to reverse the judgment of the district court of Meigs county, in a case which came into that court by appeal-from the common pleas of that county.

The action below was commenced by the plaintiffs in error, on the 20th day of February, 1855, for the recovery of certain real property described in the petition.

The defendant in error, Knight, - answered, setting up 3 state of facts showing that the plaintiffs’ right of action accrued in 1827, while they were infants ; that their disability, as infants, respectively, ceased in 1837 and 1839; and a con tinuous adverse possession in himself from 1827, when the plaintiffs’ action accrued, until the time of the commencement of the suit in 1855; being more than ten, but less than twenty-one years after the removal of the plaintiffs’ disability on account of infancy.

The plaintiffs demurred to the answer; and the district court, on hearing, sustained the demurrer, and gave judgment for the defendants, which is the error assigned.

The only.question is, whether the plaintiffs were barred by [210]*210the lapse of ten years after disability removed, or whether it required the lapse of twenty-one years after disability removed to constitute such bar ?

The right of action, in this case, accrued in 1827; the plaintiffs were then infants ; and the “ act for the limitation of actions,” then in force, wras that of February 25, 1824 (2 Chase’s Stat. 1402); and, by the second section of that act, the term of twenty-one years in addition to the ordinary limitation of twenty-one years, was saved to persons under disability, in which to bring ejectment after disability removed.

The limitation act of February 22, 1830 (3 Chase’s Stat. 1654), repealed the second section of the act of 1824, and substituted, in favor of persons under disability, in addition to the ordinary limitation, a saving of the action of ejectment for only ten years after disability removed.

Then came the “ act for the limitation of actions,” of February 18, 1831; and by the provisions of this act, this case is governed and the question before us must be determined. (3 Chase’s Stat. 1770.) This, like the immediately preceding act of 1830, in addition to the ordinary limitation of twenty-one years, saves the action of ejectment in favor of persons under disability, for the term of ten years only after disability removed; and it repeals entirely all prior acts for the limitation of actions; but, annexed to the repealing clause is this proviso — “ provided, that all causes of action not heretofore barred, which subsisted or accrued during the time ■those acts were in force, shall be commenced within the times therein limited, and not after; and all such actions shall be barred after the expiration of the several times allowed for their commencement, according to the provisions of said acts, respectively, and their amendments.”

Counsel for plaintiffs have argued the question as if this proviso had left all causes of action' which had accrued under preceding acts,, to be governed by them. If this were so, it is clear that the provisions of the act of 1824, under which the plaintiffs’ right of action accrued, would apply to the case and save the plaintiffs’ rights. But such is not its language. It [211]*211is, “ subsisted or accrued.” This statute, of 1831, bears internal evidence that it was drawn by an intelligent hand, and that its words were carefully measured. The word, “ subsisted,” is significant; effect must be given to it; and we can not but think that it is fatal to the plaintiffs’ case. The plaintiffs’ right of action accrued under the act of 1824; but the only section of that act applicable to the question was unconditionally repealed by the act of 1830, and left the question dominated by the act of 1830. The right of action having “ subsisted ” under the act of 1830, the provision of that act of 1831 left the rights of the plaintiffs where it found them; that is, under the act of 1830, which saved them only ten years after disability removed. And that time having expired prior to the commencement of this suit below, the judgment of the court below was right.

We are referred, however, to the eases of Bigelow v. Bigelow, 6 Ohio Rep. 96, and Hazlet v. Critchfield, 7 Ohio Rep. 497 [153], in which the judges delivering the opinion of the court in those cases, speaking of the operation of the proviso in the act of 1831, declare, in general and sweeping terms, that “ the limitation laws of Ohio, are so framed, that all actions and causes of action must be governed by the particular act in force at the time the cause of action accrued.” And upon the authority of these cases, the conclusion is urged, that inasmuch as the cause of action in the case before us accrued under the act of 1824, the provision of that act, which gave the plaintiffs twenty-one years after disability removed in which to bring their action, ought to be applied in their favor.

After a careful consideration of those cases, and of the statutes under which they arose, we are constrained to say, that we are unable to regard them as conclusive of the law to the extent that the opinions in those cases assume to declare it. For aught that appears in the report of those cases, the effect, and even the existence, of the significant word subsisted,” in the phrase “ subsisted or accrued,” in the proviso of the act of 1831, was wholly ignored; and the case' of Hazlet v. Critchfield, if followed, would certainly result in [212]*212some curious consequences; and among others, this — that an action of debt on simple contract, other than book account, accruing between 1810 and 1824, is not barred to this day; and this for the reason that the limitation act of 1810 contained no limitation whatever of that kind of action. The .question again arose in Putnam v. Rees, 12 Ohio Rep. 21, when, for the first time, so far as appears from the reports, the effect of the word “ subsisted,” in the provisQ of the act of 1831, was pressed upon the consideration of the court; and the result was, that the court was equally divided in opinion as to the correctness of its former holdings, and a decision in conformity to previous holdings, was reached only by the application of the rule, that where a tribunal is equally divided in opinion, the party holding the affirmative of the issue, must fail. In the subsequent case of Carey v. Robinson, 13 Ohio Rep. 181, the. question, although it arose in the case, was neither presented by counsel in argument, nor noticed in the opinion of the court. But, it is evident that the court, in the decision of the case, must have proceeded on the assumption of the correctness of the preceding decisions hereinbefore noticed.

But, seriously as we are compelled to question the correctness of the decisions to which we have referred, and to disavow their authority when attempted to be applied to the case before us, it is, perhaps, not necessary that we should assume to overrule them; for they were all actions either of assumpsit or debt. No one of them was an action for the recovery of real property.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio St. (N.S.) 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-knight-ohio-1861.