Whitaker v. Rice

9 Minn. 13
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 9 Minn. 13 (Whitaker v. Rice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker v. Rice, 9 Minn. 13 (Mich. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court

Flandrau, J.

On the third day of May, 1854, the Defendants, Rice and Becker, together with William Hollinshead, now deceased, executed to the Plaintiff a bond in the penal sum of four thousand dollars, conditioned to pay to the Plaintiff the sum of two thousand dollars, with interest, within one year from the date of said bond. The obligors were described in the body of said bond as follows: “We, William Hollinshead, of” &c. “as principal, and Edmund Rice and George L. Becker, of” &c. “ as sureties.” The bond was signed by each of the obligors in the above order, but without any further statement designating their relation to the obligee or to each other. Hollinshead, from time to time, paid the interest upon the bond, according to the tenor thereof; the last of which payments was made on the 26th of September, 1857. These payments were made by Hollinshead individually, and without the procurement, knowledge or consent of the Defendants or either of them. This action was commenced against the Defendant Rice, on the 5th of December, 1861, and against the Defendant Becker, on the 31st of the same month. No other payments were made on the bond. It will be seen that more than six years had elapsed between the due date of the bond and the commencement of the suit, but that a much less period than six years had run between the last payment of interest by Hollinshead and the commencement of the action. . The statute [17]*17of limitations is the defence set up, and the point presented for decision is, whether the payments by Hollinshead of interest, before the statute of limitations had run against the note, was effectual to prevent the operation of the statute as against his co-obligors until six years from the date of the last payment.

The argument of the case by counsel was elaborate and able. The briefs furnished the court are exhaustive of the views presented, and we have endeavored to give the case the examination its importance demands. It is exceedingly difficult to arrive at any just conclusion upon the weight of authority. We have the great name of Lord Mansfield for this doctrine as to joint debtors: “ Payment by one is payment for all, the one acting, virtually, as agent for the rest; and, in the same manner, an admission by one is an admission by all, and the law raises the promise to pay, when the debt is admitted to be due.” And we have the Court of Appeals of New York, by Judge Bronson, asserting that nothing but the great name of Mansfield could have given currency to such reasoning. Quite as great a diversity of decision and reasoning exists between the decisions of the several States, and even in the courts of the same State. So great has this uncertainty become of late, that many of the States have endeavored to extricate themselves by statutory provisions. Some directly upon the point involved in this case, as to the effect of a payment by one of several joint debtors upon the running of the statute of limitations against the other debtors, and some upon the effect of payments generally, without particularizing as to joint debtors, as is the case with our own State. .

. The distinctions which have occupied the courts have generally been as to whether an acknowledgment of the old debt was sufficient to raise a new promise to pay it, or whether a promise was actually necessary, and whether the promise must be absolute, and from what acts or words a promise could be implied, and various other subtleties, now happily forever put to rest by the passage of a statute making all such matters the subject of writing, and limiting their effect. The deliberation and full [18]*18understanding Avhich Avill uoav accompany every sucli act, Avill necessarily relieve it of all uncertainty. We at first thought it Avorth Avhile to endeavor to unravel the various eases Avhich avo have found on this subject, but have abandoned it, and cannot give our reason for doing so better than by quoting from the opinion of Judge Bronson in Van Keuren vs. Parmelee, 2 Comst., 526, Avhere he gives a very brief history of the statute of limitations:

“The statute of 21 James, 1, c. 16, which limited actions or* promises to six years, was not very well received by the legal profession, and although the early decisions under it are not open to much observation, it Avas not long before the courts began to regard the statute AAÚth disfaAror, and to resort to the most subtle constructions for the purpose of restricting its influence. There Avas a period when one Avho Avas spoken to on the subject of an old debt could not Avell give a civil ansAver without saying enough to take the case out of the statute. At a later period, and since the commencement of the present century, the courts began to regard this as a beneficial statute — a statute of repose — and commenced the difficult task of retracing their steps. But there were many obstacles in tho-Avayof the backward mov'ement;' and the legislature both here and in England took up the matter, and went beyond the old statute by requiring a new promise oi* acknoAvledgment to be in writing. In consequence of the early departure from principle in the construction of the statute, the different views which prevailed at different periods, and the unequal pace of the courts in attempting to get back on solid ground, the books are full of conflicting decisions, and any attempt to reconcile them Avould be a useless Avaste of time.”— See also elaborate opinion of Judge Story, in Bell vs. Morrison, 1 Peters' Rep., 351.

Did the question involved in this case depend for its solution upon the principles Avhich have controlled in the cases we hav'e examined, Ave Avould feel much safer in leaving the decided cases out of vieAV as authority, and attempting to settle the rights of the parties upon principle regardless of them. We are constrained [19]*19to believe, however, that the case at bar depends solely upon our own statute, which is essentially different from that of England and New York, on the effect of a payment. These 1 statutes, while requiring a writing in the case of a new promise or acknowledgment, leave the effect of a payment untouched. 9 G., 4 c. 14; New York Laws of 1849, p. 638, sec. 110.

Before entering upon an examination of the peculiar provisions of our statute on the effect of a payment, we will notice one' substantial distinction which existed in the case of payments made by one of several joint debtors, in taking the case out of the statute as to his co-debtors, and that was, whether the payment was made before the debt was barred by the statute or after it had run against it — many of the judges thinking that in the former case the payment would prevent the operation of the-statute, while in the latter it would not. Without saying more, than that we think there is some force in this distinction, we will take up our statute and endeavor to show that the legislature must have had that very point in mind when it framed the section upon which, the case turns.

The ground work of our Code was that of New York, much of it is merely a transcript; therefore, wherever we find alterations, . we must suppose them to be the work of particular design. The section of the New York Code, from which our act on this point is taken, is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
9 Minn. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-rice-minn-1864.