15 Wend. 308 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1836
By the Court,
The circuit judge erred as to the time when the notes became due. In legal effect they were payable immediately, and of course drew interest from their respective dates. Chitty on Bills, 60. 8 Johns. R. 189. 13 Wendell, 208. This error, however, was against the plaintiff, and affords no ground for a new trial. But the charge was incorrect in regard to the statute of limitations. There was no new promise by the defendant, nor foundation upon which to rest the presumption of a new promise. The opinions delivered by the chief justice, in the case of Allen v. Webster and Stafford v. Richardson, during the present term, are conclusive upon this part of the case. It would be worse than useless again to go over the argument.
Two of the notes were barred when the defendant agreed that he would not avail himself of the statute. As to those notes, it cannot be said that the agreement operated as a fraud upon the plaintiff, by inducing a delay in the commencement of the suit until after the statute attached,; but it may well be said as to the third note, which was not due at the time of such agreement. Although we cannot, upon any consistent reasoning, infer a new promise to pay the notes from what was said by the defendant, taking the whole together, yet, as it respects the note not then barred, we do not say that the plaintiff is entirely remediless. The agreement not to plead the statute, as respects this note, operated as a fraud upon the plaintiff. Had it not been made, he could have prevented the effect of the statute by commencing his suit. By pleading the statute, the defendant is guilty of bad faith, and, upon general principles, should be estopped from availing himself of that defence. No one ought to be permitted to disregard his own deliberate, lawful agreement, to the injury of another. The principle which should debar the defendant from setting up the defence in this case is a familiar one ; the only
In truth, the distinction, though we find it sometimes stated in general terms that the one is available only as evidence, while the other is by plea, does not appear to be very thoroughly determined. Baron Gilbert, on the Law of Evidence, p. 87, lays down the position, that if a defendant pleads livery and seizin (an act in pais) from the plaintiff, he cannot reply that the livery was conditional, without showing the deed, because the plaintiff is estopped from defeating his own livery by naked averment and parol evidence. In the case of Price v. Harwood, 3 Camp. 108, it was ruled, if a man whose name is William be asked before process is served whether it is not John, and he answers it is, that he cannot maintain trespass for what may be done under the process. If, in such a case, the defendant should appear and plead the misnomer in abatement, there cannot be a doubt it would be competent to reply the fact of his admission, and that, if proved, it would operate as a conclusive estoppel in pais. So to a plea of misnomer, the plaintiff may reply the recognizance of bail entered into for the defendant, though he be no party to it. Barely putting in the bail in the suit operates as an estoppel. 2 N. R. 453. If it be said that an estoppel by writing not under seal, or by parol admission, may be disproved and is not necessarily conclusive, it may be answered that admisssions of
New trial granted.