32 Mo. App. 258 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was commenced before a justice of the peace on the following complaint:
‘ ‘ Plaintiff states that, on the twenty-sixth day of January, 1876, defendant executed to him a contract and chattel mortgage, signed and sealed, by which he agreed to pay plaintiff the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars, if it was not paid to plaintiff out of the assets of the estate of John W. Colburn, deceased, and agreed to pay ail of said sum that was not paid out of the assets of said estate, and he says said estate was settled in 1880, and was utterly insolvent, and paid no part of said sum, and it all now remains due and unpaid, as evidenced by said chattel mortgage and contract herewith filed. Plaintiff asks judgment, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, per annum until paid, and costs of suit.”
The following is the exhibit filed with the complaint, being the instrument-which is the foundation of the action:
“Know all men by these presents that I, John H. Eubank, have this day sold to Ezra Harper one two-horse hack, valued at one hundred and twenty-five dollars, and one set of double harness, full set, valued at*261 twenty dollars. Whereas, Ezra Harper became security for John Eubank and John W. Colburn in the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars, and whereas, the said Harper was compelled to pay the sanie in the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars, and whereas, the said Harper has presented the same to the probate court, and had the same allowed against the estate of John W. Colburn, deceased. Now whatever sum the said Harper fails to obtain from said estate, this mortgage is made to secure, and now the said Harper may at any time when he finds how much the estate will pay, if the said John Eubank fails to pay the same to Harper and interest, then he, Harper, may take possession of said property and sell the same at auction in Edina, and out of the proceeds of said sale he shall pay the debt which said esta'te lacks in paying, and costs and charges of the sale, and balance, if any, shall be paid to Eubank. The property is in Eubank’s possession— signed, sealed, acknowledged January 26, 1876, and duly recorded.”
The defendant filed an answer, in which he mingled together a plea of the statute of limitations of ten years and a general demurrer, — setting up that the cause of action did not accrue within ten years, and also that the petition stated no cause of action.
A trial was had before the court without a jury. There was evidence tending to show tha.t the plaintiff had received no money or other thing in payment of the debt described in the above chattel mortgage, from the estate of Colburn, or from the defendant, and that he had paid as surety the debt therein described.
“And here defendant admitted that the estate of John Colburn was totally insolvent at the time of the making of the chattel mortgage and contract in evidence and has been settled or disposed of and disappeared from the docket of the probate court in 1880, and plaintiff has received no money therefrom — -which was all the evidence in the cause.”
The plaintiff requested the following declarations of law, which the court refused to give:
“2. The statute of limitations of five years is not pleaded in this cause and it is not available for the purpose of this trial.”
The court then made a finding and judgment in favor of the defendant. The bill of exceptions recites that this finding was made “on the ground that the mortgage and contract sued on does not contain a promise to the defendant to pay the debt, sufficient to take it out of the statute of limitations of five years.”
It will be seen from the foregoing that this record presents several anomalies. In the first place, the action is brought on the chattel mortgage, which is relied upon as an acknowledgment of a preexisting indebtedness, sufficient to take it out of the statute of limitations ; but in this state such an action should be brought on the original cause of action, and not on the subsequent acknowledgment. Boyd v. Hurlbut, 41 Mo. 264, 269. It is different in the case of a debt discharged by the operation of statutes of bankruptcy. Fleming v. Lullman, 11 Mo. App. 104. The distinction is that the statute of limitations d oes not, by its own vigor, destroy the debt, but merely suspends the remedy, and not even that unless the debtor elects to have it so, which election he must make by pleading the statute, and moreover, by pleading the particular statute which he chooses to invoke. Hunter v. Hunter, 50 Mo. 445; Vail v. Jacobs, 7 Mo. App. 571. But a discharge in bankruptcy extinguishes the debt, and it can only be re-created by a new promise, which is tantamount to a new contract,
It is difficult to deal with a case presenting the double anomaly of an action being wrongly brought and of the court setting up, the bar of a statute which was not pleaded. The plaintiff ’ s cause of action, if any he has, is the obligation which the law imposes upon a principal debtor to reimburse his surety who has paid it for him. This obligation arises when the surety pays the debt, and, as it is not founded upon a written promise, it is subject to the operation of the statute of limitations of five years. R. S., sec. 3230. Beyond question, the chattel mortgage, reciting the existence of the indebtedness and pledging certain property to secure so much of it as should not be paid out of the estate of the defendant’s co-debtór, was such an acknowledgment in writing of the debt as postponed the commencement of the running of the statute . of limitations to the date of the mortgage. Mastin v. Branham, 86 Mo. 643. But the chattel mortgage was not a new contract to pay the debt; it did not create a new cause of action; it did not shift the cause of action from one subject to the statute of limitations of five years to one subject to the statute of ten years. The cause of action continued to be subject to the statute of five years.
As the defendant did not see fit to plead the statute of five years, but instead pleaded the statute of tén years, we are to treat him as having waived the statute of five years, and as having been content to invoke the bar of the longer statute. But this is immaterial, and the error of the circuit court in deciding the case upon the statute of five years, although it had not been pleaded, is immaterial; for the debt was in fact barred by the longer statute at the time when the action was brought. Of this there can be no doubt, unless' the theory of the plaintiff, which will presently be spoken of, is found to be tenable. This chattel mortgage was
In view of the great liberality which is indulged in favor of statements of causes of action in actions commenced before justices of the peace, we prefer not to decide the case upon the question of the sufficiency of the petition, and wish to be understood as not expressing any opinion upon this question. But we are clear that a cause of action could not be made out of this petition if it had been originally filed in the circuit court. We can also see that if the view on which we decide the cause had not been taken by us, it would have been our duty to remand the cause, after which the defendant would have been properly allowed to amend his answer, setting up the statute of five years, which would bring the cause to an end upon the admitted facts.
As it is the judgment will be affirmed. It is so ordered.