11 Me. 115 | Me. | 1834
delivered the opinion of the Court.
It is well settled, that a material alteration avoids and defeats a note or other instrument. The cases cited for the defendant, are full to this point. The note in question, when made, was not attested by a witness. It now has such an attestation, and that by a witness, who was not present when the note was signed. Notes in writing, payable in money, attested by one or more witnesses, were excepted from the operation of the statute of limitations of Massachusetts, in force at the date of the note. The same exception is to be found in the statute of this State. Without an attestation, a note is barred by the statute in six years; with it, no bar whatever attaches by statute, any more than to a specialty, and it is subject only to a presumption of payment after twenty years, from the time when it becomes payable.
In Smith v. Dunham, 8 Pick. 246, Parker C. J. says, speaking of a note of this description, “ that with the attestation, it is in fact a different legal contract, from what it would be without.” It would seem to result from the authorities, that the note, being materially changed, was thereby defeated. But the Chief Jus
Plaintiff nonsuit.