delivered the opinion of the court.
On March 6, 1819, Darwin B. Harbison executed his bond for $566, payable in twelve months, to Cape Girardeau county, for the use of the road and canal fund, with a mortgage to secure it on 212 acres of land. Harbison dying, Peter Byrne became his administrator, and in that capacity sold the mortgaged premises in 1861, for payment of debts of the estate; John Harbison, defendant in error, being the purchaser. Afterwards Byrne died, and defendant in error
Defendant pleaded the statute of limitations in ordinary form. Plaintiff replied, alleging two several acknowledgments in writing, within ten years before the commencement of the suit; one by Byrne, as administrator, and the other by defendant. The court, sitting as a jury, found for the defendant, and rendered judgment accordingly.
The plaintiff introduced on the trial Byrne’s report of his sale as administrator, in which the land was stated to be “subject to a certain mortgage lien for the sum of $410, and accruing interest.” He also introduced a deed of trust executed by defendant to Thomas B. English, iu 1866, containing this expression : “It is also understood that the said first mentioned tract, or the one-third part thereof, owned by said deceased, was by him mortgaged to the county of Cape Girardeau for the sum expressed in said mortgage, and which yet remains unsatisfied.”
At the close of the trial plaintiff offered the following declarations of law, which the court refused: 1. The payments on the note secured by mortgage, and such payments on the mortgage, are such an acknowledgment and recognition of the debt as will prevent the bar of the statute of limitations. 2. The recognition and acknowledgment of the debt for which suit is brought, by the administrator of the mortgagor, and also by this defendant after he had become the owner of the real estate mortgaged, are such recognitions and acknowledgments and promises to pay the debt as will prevent the bar of the statute of limitations. 3. The debt for which suit is instituted, is not barred by the statute of limitations.
These declarations were objectionable both in form and substance. The cases are very rare in which it is admissible to frame declarations of law for the court, in disregard of the rules which are imperative for instructions given to a jury. In either case, the questions of law and those of fact should
As this could not be treated as a suit upon the bond, the relevancy of an acknowledgment by the administrator of the obligor, to take the case out of the statute, is not apparent. It has been repeatedly held, and is now unquestioned, that a note or bond may be barred by limitation, and yet the mortgage securing it may be enforced against the land. (Wiswell vs. Baxter,
In Bell vs. Morrison, (
There is no sort of propriety in confounding the statute of limitations with the presumption of payment arising from lapse of time. As defenses, the two are wholly distinct in their applications and incidents. When the statute affects a right of action, it operates simply a blight, as it were, upon its recoverable energy. It matters not in the least, whether the demand has been previously paid or not, the statute destroys forever, upon the last day of the allotted period, its vitality in a court of justice. Hence, if there be not a new contract in the promise or acknowledgment upon which the creditor relies, he has still nothing to stand upon. But in the other defense, the fact of payment, real or supposed, is the only matter to be considered. The law first presumes payment. An acknowledgment by the debtor merely removes this presumption by furnishing evidence to prove that the debt has not been paid. There is no new contract, express or implied. The recovery must be upon the original demand or nothing.
A mortgagee in possession who, for the period of limitation, refuses to recognize the existence of the mortgage, or any equitable claim in the mortgagor, may stand upon such adverse possession, and, under color of the statute, resist an effort by the mortgagor to enforce his equity of redemption. (Demorest vs. Wynkoop,
Thus, it will be seen that the rig]its of the parties in this ease were not properly measurable by the statute of limita
It is unnecessary to say here, that by analogy with our statute, ten years would suffice to raise the presumption. For more than twenty years appear in the proofs for that purpose, and the acknowledgment in the deed of trust occurred less than ten years before the commencement of the suit. How, then, stands this acknowledgment made to a stranger? As an admission of a fact, against the interest of the party making it, it is just as good in evidence as if' made to the plaintiff. It follows that, however insufficient it might be against a plea of the statute of limitations, it may in this proceeding accomplish all that the plaintiff requires for a recovery. It furnishes evidence to show that the debt has not been paid.
A point was made on the fact that the bond had never been allowed against the estate of Harbison, in course of administration. But in so far as this proceeding was for foreclosure against a purchaser, that fact was not materia],
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded;
