9 Tex. 539 | Tex. | 1853
In relation to the refusal of the first charge, we are of opinion that there is no error in the ruling of the court.
There is some plausibility in the assumption that the 22d section of the act was intended to apply only to persons who left tho Republic with the intention of returning, and not to those who removed with no such intention, and who, in fact, never did return. But the object of the section was for tho pro
Nor is there any error in refusing tho second charge.
The proposition, as presented, has no direct application to the facts of the case. The deceased removed from the State before the note became due, and the statute did not commence to run during- his lifetime. There is no proof of any kind as to the time of his death. If we look to the facts of the case for presumptions as to that period, we may infer that administration was taken out within a reasonable time, a year or two years, for instance, after his death; and consequently, if even the statute did then commence to run, yet the bar would not have been completed prior to the commencement of the action. Without considering whether the charge, as a legal proposition, be correct or otherwise, we are of opinion that there'was no error in refusing to give it under the facts of this case.
Judgment affirmed.