9 A. 786 | N.H. | 1886
In assumpsit, if the defendant pleads a set-off, the plaintiff may reply the statute of limitations. Wood Lim. Act., s. 281; Rollins v. Horn,
It appears that the parties settled in February, 1871; that the great number of items, unlike in subject-matter, charged in both the specification and set-off, arose at different times in the dealings of the parties between the settlement and the commencement of the suit, and that no settlement was made during this period. The report finds that no new promise was made by either party to pay any item more than six years old at the date of the writ, and that no special application was made of any item by either side in payment of any item on the other side. The referee ruled that the statute barred the accounts of both parties that were over six years old at the date of the writ; and the defendant's exception raises the question as to his account.
On the facts above stated, no error is seen in the ruling; but the referee makes a further finding, on which more difficult questions arise, both as to its meaning and the law. He finds that the understanding of the parties was, that any funds in their hands at the end of each year were to be applied on the balance of indebtedness, whichever way it might be, of one to the other, — that is, it was the apparent thought or expectation of each party, but nothing was ever said by either to the other about it, and neither made *273 a promise to the other. It was the common or ordinary understanding between any two parties having dealings together for a series of years, that the account of one shall go to balance the other. The finding is ambiguous, especially the main part of it, to such a degree that it cannot be practically applied to the case; but when considered in connection with its qualifying adjuncts, the referee's meaning would seem to be that the common understanding between parties who have mutual dealings for a series of years is, that the accounts of one will be set off against the accounts of the other, and that these parties were not an exception to the general rule, although they never said anything about it or made a promise. This leaves the case to be governed by the same legal principles that control the great mass of transactions between men, that depend on the original undertakings, unchanged by new promises or renewals in any form.
The inquiry is, then, whether the ordinary understanding that exists between parties at the commencement of mutual dealings, when nothing is said, that the accounts of one will be set off against the other, or go to balance those of the other, will take the account out of the operation of the statute of limitations. A leading case on this point is Catling v. Skoulding, 6 T. R. 189, in which it was decided that if there is a mutual account of any sort between the parties for any item of which credit has been given within, six years, that is evidence of an acknowledgment of such an open account, and of a promise to pay the balance, that will take it out of the statute. Lord Kenyon said, — "It is not doubted but that a promise or acknowledgment within six years will take the case out of the statute; and the only question is, whether there is not evidence of an acknowledgment in the present case. Here are mutual items of account; and I take it to have been clearly settled, as long as I have any memory of the practice of the courts, that every new item and credit in an account given by one party to the other is an admission of there being some unsettled account between them, the amount of which is afterwards to be ascertained, and any act which the jury may consider as an acknowledgment of its being an open account is sufficient to take the case out of the statute." Catling v. Skoulding is in effect the case now before the court, in which no acknowledgment exists since the opening of their accounts other than that it has been a mutual running account. Neither has there been an application made of any item in either account on the account of the other, or any item in it, and neither ever said to the other that the account of one should go to balance the other. This leaves nothing to support the referee's finding, as to the apparent thought or expectation of the parties, but the fact that the accounts were mutual, as in Catling v. Skoulding.
The Statute of 21 James, c. 16, s. 3, was in substance enacted in this state in 1825. Laws of 1830, title 16, c. 3, s. 1. "All actions of account and upon the case, other than such as concern *274
the trade of merchandise between merchant and merchant, their factors and servants; all actions of debt grounded upon any lending or contract not under seal; all actions of debt for arrearages of rent; and all actions of assault, menace, battery, wounding, and imprisonment; or any of them which shall be hereafter sued or brought, — shall be commenced and sued within the time hereinafter limited, and not afterwards, to wit, the actions of account, and actions of debt and actions upon the case, other than for slander, and said actions of trespass, detinue, and replevin for cattle and goods, and said actions of trespass quare clausum fregit, within six years next after the cause of such actions or suits, and not after." In England, the exception as to merchants' accounts was held to include mutual running accounts. Cranch v. Kirkman, 1 Peake *121. In Catling v. Skoulding this class of accounts was taken out of the statute on the additional ground before stated. The doctrine of those cases, as to acknowledgments and new promises, was generally adopted in common-law jurisdictions for a time at least. In 1827 — '28 the cases of Tanner v. Smart 6 B. C. 603, and Bell v. Morrison, 1 Pet 351, were decided, in which it was held that if no express promise was proved, but a promise is to be raised by implication from the acknowledgment of the party, it ought to contain an unqualified and direct admission of a present subsisting debt which the party is liable and willing to pay. Hart v. Prendergast, 14 M. W. 741, 744. In 1830, in Russell v. Copp,
It is said, however, that this case has not been followed, and the court is asked to reexamine it. It may be true, literally, that the case has not been approved in other jurisdictions to the extent that *275
their courts have reversed their previous decisions and approved of this; but it is true that the doctrine of Catling v. Skoulding, as before stated, has disappeared in England and in most of the states by statute, and it is now held that no new promise or acknowledgment will take a case out of the statute unless it is in writing, signed by the party chargeable thereby. 3 Pars. Cont. 67; Cottam v. Partridge, 4 M. G. 274, 277, 291; Chace v. Trafford,
The legislature have recognized the doctrine of Blair v. Drew, and conformed their action to it. Laws of 1840, c. 504, s. 1, repealed the clause in the act of 1825, excepting from its operation actions of account wherein the trade of merchandise between merchant and merchant, their factors and servants, was concerned, which, with the construction given this clause in Blair v. Drew, limiting it literally to accounts as to merchandise between merchant and merchant and their servants, left no class of accounts that were not barred in six years after the cause of action accrued, item by item; and the Revised Statutes, c. 181, ss. 3, 4, place the statute of limitations in form, after taking from the statute of 1825 the clause repealed in 1840. The statutory law is now essentially the same as to actions of accounts. G. L., c. 221, s. 3. This statute, and the decision in Blair v. Drew and the subsequent cases in harmony with it, constitute the law of the state on the question. If the only other interpretation that the findings of the referee appear susceptible of is adopted, that the parties understood, at the commencement of the dealings in February, 1871, that at the end of each year the accounts were to be stated, a balance struck and *276
applied on a balance of past indebtedness, the dealings of each year would constitute a transaction by itself, and the balance would be a new item on which a right of action accrued at the end of each year that would be barred in six years. When the balance was struck, it was no longer the open running account, but a closed account stated, on which the statute would run if not applied as expected. Neither would the balance be a new item in a new account, as such was not the agreement. It formed no item in the open running account. Bank v. Knapp, 3 Pick. 96, 109; Belchertown v. Bridgman,
Judgment for the plaintiff.
CARPENTER, J., did not sit: the others concurred.