78 N.C. 128 | N.C. | 1878
The only question (130) before us is as to the application of the statute to the facts of this case, and whether its operation was suspended during the time the plaintiff remained ignorant of the possession and conversion of the bonds by the defendant, and began to run only at the date of discovery.
Several cases, very briefly reported in 2 N.C. were cited in support of the proposition that the statute ran only from the time when the plaintiff acquired knowledge of the tortious act, and that the defendant was liable; and there have been cases elsewhere in which it is held that in case of fraud the statute runs only from the time of its discovery. The doctrine seems to have been founded on the rule which prevails in a court of equity, and will not permit one who has fraudulently concealed his own wrongful act, and thereby prevented the suit, to set up as a defense the plaintiff's delay in bringing it. But such is not the law in this State. Here it is held, both on principle and authority, that the force and effect given by the statute to the lapse of time cannot be defeated by proof that the plaintiff did not know of the defendant's act of conversion or of his fraud. We will refer to some of our own decided cases:
In Hamilton v. Shepherd,
In Baines v. Williams,
We have not overlooked paragraph 9, sec. 34, C. C. P., which provides that when relief is asked on the ground of fraud, the statute (132) shall run only from the discovery of the fraud by the aggrieved party, "in cases which heretofore were solely cognizable in a court of equity." This act if applicable would not aid the plaintiff, as he is asserting a legal right in a form of proceeding substituted for an action at law, and entirely outside the jurisdiction of a court of equity. The act, however, may be regarded as a legislative declaration that the effect of the statute cannot be defeated, even in case of undiscovered fraud, unless the fraud is such that the jurisdiction of a court of equity was alone competent to afford relief. Such seems also to be the opinion of this Court as intimated in the recent case of Batts v. Winstead,
We therefore sustain the ruling of the court, that the plaintiff's action is barred.
PER CURIAM. Affirmed.
Cited: Kahnweiler v. Anderson, post, 144; Egerton v. Logan,
Distinguished: Burwell v. Linthicum,
(133)