By the Court,
In this case it is admitted that the original indebtedness is barred, and the only question, upon the instruction asked and refused, to be decided is, whether a payment of part of the indebtedness applied by the defendant as a credit upon such indebtedness, with the assent of the plaintiff, would have the effect to take the same out of the operation of the statute of limitations. At the argument it was claimed that a proper solution of this question would depend upon the construction which the court should give to section 25 of the code. That section provides: “Whenever any payment of principal or interest has been or shall be made
It may be observed that this section is nearly a transcript of the enacting clause of the statute, 19 Geo., 4th eh., 14, commonly called Lord Tenwiden’s act, and that payment of principal or interest on a specific demand is still retained by the statute as sufficient to keep it in force. The instruction only asked that the sum applied by the defendant as a credit upon the indebtedness, with the assent of plaintiff, was
It follows that the judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered.