The only question involved on this appeal is whether an action upon a judgment for a sum of money, rendered in a court of record, may be maintained if brought within 20 years from the time the party recovering it was entitled to a mandate to enforce it, or whether it must be commenced within 10 years. The appellant contends that section 376 of the Code of Civil Procedure does not prescribe a limitation in actions upon such judgments, and hence the 10-years limitation provided for by section 388 is made applicable to such an action. Section 376 provides that such a judgment is presumed to be paid and satisfied after the expiration of 20 years, and that such presumption is conclusive, except in cases of part payment, or written acknowledgment of the amount, or some part thereof, by the person sought to be charged. Thus the question presented is whether section 376 is to be regarded as a statute of limitation specially applicable to actions on such judgments within the intent and meaning of section 388. The chapter in which these sections are found is entitled “Limitation of the time of enforcing a civil remedy,” and section 378 provides that a party seeking to avail himself of the provisions of section 376 may allege that such' action was not commenced within 20 years, the time therein limited. ' When this whole statute is examined, and its language and purpose considered, it becomes quite manifest that the legislature regarded section 376 as prescribing a special limitation in actions upon such judgments. It is said there is a clear distinction between a presumption of payment and a statute of limitation. As an abstract proposition, that statement may perhaps be correct. It is doubtless true that there may be presumptions of payment which are not statutes of limitation, but it does not follow that a presumption of payment created by statute may not constitute a statutory limitation of the time within which an action can be maintained. That a statute like the one under consideration,
Gray v. Seeber
25 N.Y. St. Rep. 641 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
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