110 P. 164 | Idaho | 1910
This action was instituted for the foreclosure nf a mortgage. The note and mortgage were dated at Salt Lake City December 18, 1901, andibeeame due and payable ■July 1, 1902, at McCornick & Company’s bank at Salt Lake City. Certain letters from each of the defendants Olsen and ‘Browne were pleaded by the plaintiff for the purpose of showing that each of the defendants had acknowledged the debt so as to relieve the cause of action from the plea of the bar •of the statute of limitations. To this complaint the defendants demurred, alleging as ground for the demurrer that the •complaint on its face showed that it was barred by the statute •of limitations. The .court sustained the demurrer and the •action was dismissed. This appeal is from the judgment.
The note and mortgage sued upon jwere signed by Nat Olsen and John Lynch. Lynch subsequently died, and Robert B. Browne, one of the defendants here, was appointed as administrator of his estate. The question to be decided is whether or not the letters pleaded are sufficient to constitute an acknowledgment of the original contract within the purview
The letters written by Olsen and pleaded by plaintiff and •on which he relies are as follows: On November 24, 1902, he wrote, among other things, “I was in hopes I would make enough out of this run to pay off the mortgage but am sorry to say I did not. The ore did not mill as much as I expected, besides the cost of handling ore up here is high.If I should be able to get a party to take hold and buy, and if I did the first money of course would be paid to you. I don’t know what to do now when you foreclose mortgage. I won’t have the money to pay and won’t be able to get another party interested. I was in hopes you would give me time.” 'This letter, it will be observed, was written more than five years prior to the commencement of this action. The plaintiff must, therefore, rely on the other letters. On June 21, 1903, Olsen wrote the plaintiff in which he discussed his mining operations and a prospective sale, and said: “I suppose that if I do not make a deal of the mine will have to go to work and take out ore and pay off mortgage.” On October 26,1903, he again wrote to the plaintiff, speaking of the mines and a sale he had in view, and said: “Now, if I can make this deal will try and get enough money down to liquidate the mortgage you hold against the property. ’ ’ On June 13, 1906, he wrote plaintiff further discussing the property and its probable value and said: “The first payment on Baltimore mine is due about the middle of October when I hope to pay you.”
The question now arises as to whether any one of these letters, commencing with the one of date June 21, 1903, is sufficient to waive the bar of the statute of limitations and
See. 4078 of the Rev. Codes of this state provides as follows: “No acknowledgment or promise is sufficient evidence of a new or continuing contract, by which to take the case out of the operation of this title, unless the same is contained, in some writing, signed by the party to be charged thereby.”
Some difference of opinion has existed among the courts as to whether a statute like the foregoing requires the acknowledgment of the debt to be coupled with a promise to pay the same. Some courts have held that “the acknowledgment which is requisite as evidence of a new or continuing contract must not only be in writing but it must be an unconditional promise to pay the debt.” (Helm Co. v. Griffin, 112 N. C. 356, 16 S. E. 1023; Warren v. Cleveland, 111 Tenn. 174, 102 Am. St. 749, 76 S. W. 910.) Other courts' have taken the position that it is not necessary that the acknowledgment be coupled with a promise to pay, but that it is sufficient if the party to be charged unqualifiedly admits a present and subsisting liability to pay the debt. (Elder v. Dyer, 26 Kan. 604, 40 Am. Rep. 320; Clark v. King, 54 Kan. 222, 38 Pac. 281; Cleland v. Hostetler, 13 N. M. 43, 79 Pac. 801, and cases cited; Chidsey v. Dowell, 91 Mo. 626, 60 Am. Rep. 267, 4 S. W. 446.) There are still other eases which, while in legal, effect they seem to us to be in accord with the line of authorities last cited, yet attempt to' -hold to a somewhat middle ground between these two extremes. They hold that “to take a debt out of the statute of limitations by reason of an acknowledgment or new promise, it is necessary that it should be an unqualified acknowledgment, not only that the debt was just originally, but that it continues due al the time of the acknowledgment, so a promise to pay can fairly be implied; either an express promise to pay the debt or a! conditional promise the condition of which has been performed.” (Weston v. Hodg
Our statute is identical witb see. 360 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California, and tbe supreme court of that state in Southern Pacific Co. v. Prosser, 122 Cal. 413, 55 Pac. 145, has indicated the view that this statute only requires an ' ‘ acknowledgment, ” where the acknowledgment was made prior to the running of the statute and while the debt was yet a subsisting “continuing contract.” There a distinction was made between the acknowledgment of an indebtedness made before it was barred by the statute and the acknowledgment and promise to pay an indebtedness already barred. The court in that case quotes with approval from McCormick v. Brown, 36 Cal. 180, 95 Am. Dec. 170, as follows: “There are two ultimate facts that may be proved in the mode prescribed — a continuing contract and a new contract. The acknowledgment or promise made while the contract is a subsisting liability establishes a continuing contract; and, when made after the bar of the statute, a new contract is created. ’ ’
Chief Justice Beatty, commenting on the McCormick case, said: “On principle this distinction must exist. When a debtor makes a new promise before an action is barred upon the original contract, he does not make himself liable a second time for the same debt, and the old promise is not merged in the new; he merely continues his original liability for a longer term. In other words, he merely waives so much of the period of limitations as has run in his favor. But when his legal obligation is at an end by reason of the lapse of the full period of limitation or of a discharge in bankruptcy, a new promise creates a new obligation 'and is itself the basis of the action. A clear recognition of this distinction reconciles all seeming conflict in the decisions of this court, and demonstrates the essential difference between this case and the case of Wells v. Harter, 56 Cal. 342, in which it appears that the action on the principal obligation had been barred before the new promise was made.”
It follows, therefore, from this line of reasoning that a clear and definite acknowledgment of the existence of the contract and liability, whether coupled with a direct promise to pay or not, carries with it an implied promise to pay, and this in a large measure reconciles the cases which hold that there must be a promise to pay with those which hold that it is sufficient to have an unqualified acknowledgment of the existing lia^-bility. It has been said by some of the courts, however, and particularly by Justice Brewer in Elder v. Dyer, supra, that the acknowledgment is sufficient if it be unqualified and certain, even though it be coupled with the express declaration that the party will never pay the debt. Now, it is not necessary to go to that extent to meet the facts of this case, and wo therefore specifically withhold any expression of opinion as to the law under a state of facts where the debtor might, acknowledge the debt and yet specifically refuse to pay it. "We are satisfied, however, to hold that a definite acknowledgment of the debt, although nothing is said whatever about ever paying the same, is clearly sufficient under our statute where it is not coupled with any refusal to pay or declaration that the party will not pay or never intends to pay. It should be remembered that under the statute and the holding of the court in this state (Chemung Mining Co. v. Hanley, 9 Ida. 794, 77 Pac. 226; Kelly v. Leachman, 3 Ida. 629, 33 Pac. 44;
Turning now to the facts of the particular case in hand, we find' that on October 26, 1903, the defendant Olsen in writing plaintiff, in speaking of a prospective sale of some of his
The next question presented in this case is the power and authority of the administrator to waive the bar of the statute of limitations as against the estate represented by him. This claim had never been presented to the administrator by the
See. 5469 of tbe Rev. Codes provides as follows: “No claim must be allowed by tbe executor or administrator, or by tbe probate judge, which was barred by tbe statute of limitations, at tbe time of tbe death of tbe decedent. "When a claim is presented to tbe probate judge for his allowance, be may, in bis discretion, examine tbe applicant and others, on oath, and bear any other legal evidence touching tbe validity of tbe claim.” Sec. 5471 of tbe Rev. Codes provides that, “Tbe time during which there shall be a vacancy in the administration must not be included in any limitations herein prescribed. ” It is also provided by sec. 5460 of the Rev. Codes that every executor or administrator must immediately after bis appointment give a notice by publishing tbe same in some newspaper in tbe county, requiring all persons having claims against tbe estate to present tbe same, in tbe manner prescribed by law. Sec. 5461 provides that tbe time that shall be expressed in this notice must be ten months after its first publication when tbe estate exceeds in value tbe sum of $1,500, and four months when it does not exceed that stun. See. 5463 provides that all claims not presented within tbe time prescribed by tbe notice shall be “barred forever.”
These provisions of tbe statute indicate to our minds that it was tbe intention of tbe lawmakers to prohibit tbe administrator in any manner extending tbe bar of tbe statute of ■limitations or to interrupt its running against tbe debt or
This view of the statute is reinforced by the provisions of sec. 4078, which we have heretofore considered- in this opinion. That statute provides that an acknowledgment cannot take the ease out of the operation of the statute “unless the same is contained in some writing signed by the party to be charged thereby.” Now, “the party to be charged” is the debtor and not his legal representative. (Hanson v. Towle, 19 Kan. 282.) There is no- personal liability against the administrator or executor for the debts of the decedent. The administrator or executor is only liable in a representative capacity, and in that capacity only to the extent of the assets of the estate. The acknowledgment of a debt or- liability under this provision of the statute so as to take it out of the operation of the statute of limitation appeals to the conscience and sense of fair dealing of the debtor. After he
A number of authorities have been cited on this question, and we are aware that a great many courts have held that the administrator may waive the bar of the statute of limitations. That seems to be the general rule in England. These cases, however, rest upon statutes very different from ours. We do not find such a holding from any court where they have statutes the same as or similar to those above quoted’. (See 2 Woerner’s Law of Administration, see. 401; Hanson v. Towle, 19 Kan. 282; Bank of Montreal v. Buchanan, 32 Wash. 480, 73 Pac. 482; Estate of Claghorn, 181 Pa. 600, 59 Am. St. 680, 37 Atl. 918.) In the ease last cited, the supreme court of Pennsylvania, after reviewing the authorities, said: “It will be seen from these most explicit decisions that the personal representative is not answerable for a cause of action not created by the decedent; that if by a new promise he revive a debt already barred, or prolongs the life of one not yet barred, the contract is his own, and he is personally answerable.” (Clayton v. Dinwoodey, 33 Utah, 251, 93 Pac. 728, 14 Ann. Cas. 926. To the contrary effect, see Preston v. Cutter, 64 N. H. 467, 13 Atl. 874; Brown v. Anderson, 13 Mass. 201; Suhre v. Benton (Tex. Civ. App.), 25 S. W. 822; see note to Schlicker v. Hemenway, 52 Am. St. 123.)
We therefore conclude that the plaintiff stated a good cause of action against the defendant Olsen, and that as against the administrator and the intervenors the complaint was open to the demurrer on the ground that the cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations. The judgment must therefore be reversed and the cause remanded for further