8 App. D.C. 262 | D.C. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an action of assumpsit, and the declaration contains the common money counts only. There is a bill of particulars filed with the declaration, showing for what and the particulars upon which the claim is based, and the date when the money Was due and payable, namely, the 1st of January, 1892. The action was brought on the 23d of April, 1895.
The defendant, Albert B. Ruff, as executor of Milton Ford, deceased, pleaded several pleas, and among them the statute of limitations. To this latter plea the plaintiff) Luther W.' Gibson, replied that Ford, the testator of the defendant, died November the 9th, 1892, leaving a will, appointing the defendant executor thereof, and personal estate; that the will was contested, but was admitted to probate on the 6th of April, 1894, and that letters testamentary were granted to the defendant, as executor of the will, on the 9th day of April, 1894; and the plaintiff avers that before the last mentioned day no administration was or could be had upon the estate of the deceased debtor, and that the plaintiff, on the 16th day of November, 1894, filed his claim in the probate court, against the estate of the deceased debtor, duly probated according to law, whereof the defendant had due notice.
To this replication the defendant demurred, and the de-.inurrer having been sustained, there was judgment entered for the defendant, and from which the plaintiff has appealed. And the question is, whether the replication de.murred to furnished a sufficient answer to the plea of the statute of limitations, to preclude the bar of that statute.
As will be observed, the original debtor died more than ten months after the istof January, 1892, the date at which
Section 2 of the Maryland act for the limitations of actions, of 1715, ch.. 23, in force in this District, is substantially similar.to section 3 of the statute of 21. James I, ch. 16, for the limitations of actions, except that in the statute of James the period of limitation applicable to actions of as-sumpsit is six years, while in the Maryland act it is but three years. The provisions of the two statutes, as applicable to actions of the class to which the present belongs, being essentially the same, with the exception just mentioned, the construction of the two acts has been the same in all material respects.
In the courts of England, it has long since been the settled construction of their statutes of limitations, that when the right of action has accrued, and there are parties competent to sue and be sued, and the period of limitation once begins to run, the time continues to run, notwithstanding any subsequent disability. This was laid down as settled
In the case of Rhodes v. Smethurst, admmistrator of Hobson, 4 M. & W. 42, the identical question was presented that is presented in the case before us, except that it was there presented in a stronger aspect than it is presented here. In that case it was held, by an unanimous court, and after a very full dircussion at bar, that it was no answer to a plea of the statute of limitations (St. 21 Jas. I, ch. 16, sec. 3), that, after the cause of action had accrued, and after the statute had begun to run, the debtor, within the six years, died, and that (by reason of litigation as to the right to probate) an executor of his will was not appointed until of ter the expiration of the six years, and that the plaintiff sued such executor within a reasonable time after probate granted. In that’case the litigation in regard to the probate, of the will covered several years, and the plaintiff there had no time, as the plaintiff had in the present’ case, after letters testamentary granted, to enable him to bring the action within the period of the statutory limitation. In the very full and clearly reasoned opinion of the Lord Chief Baron, he said : “ Now the proposition contended for is this— that, although the debt accrued against a debtor who might have been sued, and in favor of a creditor who might sue, yet, as there is a portion of the time that has elapsed, the lapse of which was caused by the litigation as to who should
This case of Rhodes v. Smethurst was taken on writ of error to the Court of Exchequer Chamber, where the question was reargued and reconsidered (6 M. & W. 351), and in an elaborate' opinion by Lord Chief Justice Dexman, reviewing all the previous cases upon the subject, the judgment of the Court of Exchequer was unanimously affirmed. In the course of his opinion, the Lord Chief Justice said:
The same principle of construction has been applied to the Maryland act of limitations of 1715, in force here, as that applied to the English statute of James I. In the case of Ruff’s Adm. de bonis non v. Bull, 7 H. & Johns. 15, it was held, that when the statute of limitations once begins to run, no subsequent circumstances stop its operation. It does not, however, begin to operate unless there is a person in esse competent to sue. The same principle was reaffirmed in Young v. Mackall, 4 Md. 373.
In the case of Walden v. Gratz's Heirs, 1 Wheat. 292, 296, the same principle of construction is maintained. In that case, it was argued by counsel for the defendant in error, that after the statute has begun to run, it stops, if the title passes to a person under any legal disability, and recommences after such disability shall be removed. But the court, in-response.to this argument of counsel, said: “This construction, in the opinion of this court, is not justified by
It thus clearly appears, that the principle of construction that applies to and must control the decision of this case, is well and long since established, and too firmly settled to be questioned. The decisions of courts of high authority are numerous which maintain the principle of construction we have stated, and many of them upon facts quite analogous, and in some respects similar, to the facts of the present case. Hayman v. Keally, 3 Cr. C. C. 325; Marsteller v. Marsteller, 93 Penn. St. 350, 355; Granger v. Granger, 6 Ohio, 35, 42; Tyson, Adm., v. Britton, 6 Texas, 222.
It has, however, been earnestly argued, in behalf of the plaintiff, that the principle of the decisions made in the cases of Hanger v. Abbott, 6 Wall. 532, and Braun v. Sauerwein, 10 Wall. 223, where it was held, that the operation of the statute of limitations was suspended during the existence of the war of the rebellion, should be applied here, and thus arrest the running of the statute during the pendency of the litigation in regard to the probate of the will of the debtor. But those cases stand on peculiar ground, and are based on the paramount necessities and restraints imposed by a state of war. There is no such analogy between those cases and the present, as would justify the court in declaring that the running of the statute as applied to this case, was suspended during the pendency of the litigation as to the right of probate of the will of the deceased debtor.
In this case, however, the plaintiff has suffered no prejudice by the delay occasioned by the litigation in regard to the probate of the will. Of the three years, the statu
Finding no error, the judgment appealed from must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.