102 A.D. 15 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The following is the opinion of Gildersleeve, J., delivered at Special Term:
The action is brought on a judgment recovered by plaintiff, a foreign corporation, against defendant in the Superior Court of Baltimore, in the State of Maryland. The answer avers, substantially, that this action was commenced on July 9, 1904; that the judgment in question was recovered in the State of Maryland on February 15, 1892; that by the law of that State an action upon the judgment was barred in twelve years from its date; that no steps have been taken to revive it, and that the time limit by the laws of said State for bringing an action upon said judgment expired on February 15, 1904. The answer also avers that on Feb- . ruary 15, 1892, and previous thereto and for some time thereafter, the defendant was a resident of Baltimore, Md.; that the cause. of action did not accrue within twelve years before the commencement of this action; that it did not originally accrue in favor of a resident of the State of New York; that “ the person or corporation in whose favor it originally accrued has never become a resident, of this State, and the cause of action has never been assigned to and continuously owned by a resident of the State of New York.” The plaintiff demurs to this separate defense as insufficient in law on the face thereof. Before the enactment of sections 390 and 390a of the Code of Civil Procedure, the courts of this State took no notice of the Statutes of Limitations of other States as a bar to the maintenance of actions in this State on causes of action arising outside of their jurisdiction, but administered our own laws only on that subject. (Miller v. Brenham, 68 N. Y. 83.) The above sections of the Code of Civil Procedure, hovrever, introduced a new principle, according to which our courts apply the Statutes of Limitations of the State in which the cause of the action arose, with certain specified exceptions. Section 390 excepts cases “ where the cause of action originally accrued in favor of a resident of the State,” or “ where, before the expiration of the time so limited, the person, in whose