11 Tex. 522 | Tex. | 1854
This suit was brought on an open account of merchandize, sold by the appellee, Superveile, to the appellant, in September, 1844. It was commenced on the 5th of Febuary, 1852. The statement of facts shows that a demand was made for payment of the account in 1845. There does not appear to have been any running accounts between the parties, and this sale of merchandize seems to have been the only transaction between them, except a part payment, in some cigars, before the demand of payment of the account. The defendant plead the statute of limitations, to avoid which the plaintiff amended by averring that it was an account between merchant and merchant. The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment. A motion was made for a new trial which was overruled ; and the defendant appealed.
The only question is, Whether the facts in this case took it out of the statute of limitations % The Court below thought that it did. The opinion of the Court must have been based
In a case of accounts current, of mutual credits, where the last item charged was not within the statute of limitations, there seems to have been much diversity of opinion whether the statute could be a bar to the action. It seems, however, after long being unsettled, that the weight of authority in most of the State Courts, and in the Federal Courts, has resulted in a conclusion against the bar of the statute, because such a case is not provided for by the statute. The opposite doctrine, however, has been maintained by Chancellor Kent, in a well discussed opinion by him, in Coster v. Murray, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 522. The reasoning of the Court of Appeals of South Carolina, in Van Rhin v. Vincent, 1 McCord’s Ch.
Mr. Angel, in his standard work on limitations, in treating upon this subject, of mutual accounts to come within the exception in the statute, says, “ mutual accounts are made up of “ matters of set-off. There must be a mutual credit founded “ on a subsisting debt upon the other side, or an express or “ implied agreement for set-off of mutual debts.” (Angel, Chap. 14, Sec. 7.) The late Chief Justice Spencer, says, (it was a case of a joint purchase of goods, where one of the purchasers takes the whole goods and is to account for one-third of the profits, in such a case) it was not in his judgment within the reason or principle of the exception, which must have intended open and current accounts, where there was mutual dealing, and where there were mutual credits. (20 Johns. R. 576.) Mr. Angelí further adds in the same Section referred to' (the whole of which might be profitably inserted,) “There must “ be a mutual, or as it has been expressed, an alternate course “ of dealing. Where payments on account are made by one “ party, for which credit -is given by the other, it is an account “ without reciprocity, and only upon one side.” This has been expressly laid down to be the doctrine in Mississippi; (Fox v. Smith, 6 Howard, 346 ;) and also so ruled in Pennsylvania. (See Ingram v. Sherrard, 17 Serg. Rawle 347.) After discussing the question as the exception to the statute, in cases coming confessedly within the exception, Mr. Angelí, proceeds to say, “ Allowing that an account is such an one “ as concerns the trade of merchandize between merchant and “ merchant, yet it must be current and mutual or reciprocal, “ agreeable to the rule to be deduced from the authorities cited “ in the preceding chapter; and so, what was advanced in “ that chapter, in respect to the running of the statute against
We have seen from the facts in this case, although the sale of the goods may have been from one merchant to another, yet it was not an account current, of mutual and reciprocal demands, and therefore not within the exception to the statute of two years limitation, that barred open accounts.
We will not say anything about what lapse of time would ra,ise a presumption of payment, in a case within the exception in the statute, because it is not necessary in this case. We attach no importance, in this case, to the demand that the statement of facts shows was proven. It could only have been material, had the goods, sold, instead of being sold, been placed in the hands of the defendant for the plaintiff’s use. In such case, a demand possibly, might have been of some use, to fix the time, in the absence of other testimony, when the right of action accrued. We are satisfied that in this case, the statute of two years had barred an action before the suit was commenced; and the judgment is reversed and the cause dismissed.
Reversed and dismissed.