49 S.E. 479 | S.C. | 1904
November 24, 1904. The opinion of the Court was delivered by On August 11, 1894, Dr. E. Miller *227 gave to John F. Divine his promissory note for $1,676.02, payable one day after date. Miller died intestate on February 17, 1897, and thereafter on September 16, 1901, the plaintiff filed his complaint against the administrators of Miller's estate and his heirs at law, setting out his own note, alleging that there were other debts outstanding against the estate, and that the entire personal estate had been assigned to the widow as a homestead, and asking that the assets be marshalled, the claims established and the real estate sold for their satisfaction. The defendants in their answer admit that there is no personal estate in the hands of the administrators, and set up as a defense the statute of limitations. The Circuit Judge held that this defense could not avail because of a payment made on the note and the written promises made by C.D. Miller, one of the administrators, before the expiration of the statutory period. The appeal turns on the correctness of this ruling.
The payment relied on was made under these circumstances. Dr. E. Miller, the intestate, assigned to the plaintiff a bond and mortgage of Mrs. Beulah M. Watson as collateral to his note. Believing that Watson might set up defenses against him which would not avail against Divine, the assignee, Miller requested Divine to foreclose in his name the Watson mortgage and apply the proceeds on his own note as a payment. After full conference with Miller, J.T. Barron, Esq., Divine's attorney, commenced the foreclosure litigation, and conducted it against Mrs. Watson, under the direction of Miller, up to the time of his death. After the death of E. Miller, C.D. Miller, one of the administrators of his estate, who was also his son, corresponded with Mr. Barron on the subject, and in his letters promised in the most explicit manner that the estate would pay the balance of the debt to Divine after the application of the proceeds of the sale of the Watson land. This was in 1898, less than six years from the maturity of the Miller note.
If the suit on the Watson collateral mortgage had continued *228
under Dr. E. Miller's direction to its termination and the proceeds of the sale had been applied to his note, under his express instructions, then the payment would have been his payment and would have arrested the currency of the statute. Hopper v. Hopper,
The promises made by the administrator, C.D. Miller, before the bar of the statute was complete, are sufficient to defeat the plea of the statute interposed by him. Reigne
v. Executor of Desportes, Dudley, 118; Johnson v.Ballard, 11 Rich., 178. But such a promise made as administrator does not bind the heir or affect his right to the protection of the statute as to real estate descended to him. Gibson v. Lowndes,
As the action is on behalf of the plaintiff and "all other creditors of E. Miller who may come in and seek relief by and contribute to the expenses of this action," and no other creditors have proved their demands, we express no opinion as to their rights.
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be modified as herein indicated.