285 N.W. 464 | Minn. | 1939
The verdict was conceded to be correct in amount if there be any liability at all. Many letters from defendant to plaintiff respecting this note, all antedating March 1, 1931, were received in evidence for the purpose only of identifying it as the only such note held by plaintiff. No exception was taken by either party to the charge. However, the trial court, upon a more complete consideration of the letter of May 27, 1937, the sole basis for the verdict, concluded, as a matter of law, that it was insufficient. It reads:
"Mrs. Zora Berghuis, "Auburn, Wash. "My dear Zora:
"Your letter received a few days ago and I hardly know what to write to you as I am unable to make any payment on that note much as I should like to if I only had the money. When I sold my printing plant I sold it with a small payment down and the rest on eight years time with six month payments and that is what I am living on and it takes all that. I had hopes to get some money from my son Charles who I started when he bought a printing plant but he has only paid back $340 in five years and you know that Canadian interests have brought us nothing. I have a letter from John Pilling in Canada and he writes that the Canadian government has allowed the mortgagors to repudiate all loans over 20 years old so we have lost all our interests there if he is to be believed. So what can I do. Much as I would like to clear up that note I can't very well deprive my family from living and my health is such that I can not do anything any more. My left leg is hot all the time and if I try to do anything I am soon all tired out, otherwise my health is good but I still take insulin daily for diabetes *153 but it does not seem to bother me but I guess it will get me sooner or later.
"I am sorry that I cannot clean up this obligation, but I simply cannot at this time.
"The family are all well and so far we are getting along nicely and hope you are the same.
"Yours very truly, "C. Burges."
The letter is to be tested by 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 9204, as construed by our decisions. It reads:
"No acknowledgment or promise shall be evidence of a new or continuing contract sufficient to take the case out of the operation of this chapter, unless the same is contained in some writing signed by the party to be charged thereby; but this section shall not alter the effect of a payment of principal or interest."
The statute has existed in essentially the same form since territorial days. In Whitney v. Reese Heylin,
"Of course, the willingness to pay need not be express, but is implied from the unqualified and unconditional acknowledgment of the debt. Moreover, the acknowledgment must be an admission, not that the debt was just originally, but that it continues due at the time of the acknowledgment. [Citing our prior cases.] But, even tested by these strict rules, we think the acknowledgment in this case was sufficient."
The two letters were held adequate in Hartnagel v. Alexander,
The judgment is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HILTON, incapacitated by illness, took no part. *156