54 Ala. 552 | Ala. | 1875
The correctness of the decree sustaining the demurrer of the appellee, Heflin, is the only matter to be considered on this appeal. The demurrer was sustained because it was supposed the case made by the bill was within and barred by the clause of subdivision 6, § 2901 of the Revised Code, which declares that actions against the sureties of executors, administrators or guardians, for any misfeasance or malfeasance whatever of their principal, must be brought within six years, the time to be computed from the act done or omitted, which fixed the liability of the surety. This provision was first introduced into our statutes by the Code of 1852. It was an extension to the sureties of an executor or administrator or guardian, of the statute of 1832, (Clay’s Dig. 329, § 90,) limiting actions against the sureties of a public officer. The provisions of the Code, limiting suits, apply only to causes of action accruing after the 17th day of January, 1853, the day when it became operative. Causes of action which had previously accrued, are subject to the former statutes of limitation, and are unaffected by the limitations .the Code prescribes. — R. C. § 2926; Martin v. Martin, 35 Ala. 560; Bedell v. Smith, 37 Ala. 625. The cause of action averred in the bill, had accrued, and was fully the subject of suit before the Code became operative. The chancellor was, therefore, in error in applying to it the clause of the Code to which we have referred. The error is not, however, cause of reversal, if the demand of the complainants is within the bar of the statutes of force at the adoption of the Code; or if barred by the presumptions arising from the lapse of time; or if it is a stale demand, offensive to the pecu
The statutes of limitation prior to the Code, were in terms directed only against legal remedies. Particular forms of action which must have been pursued — particular injuries for which redress must have been sought — particular rights which must have been asserted — particular contracts,_ on which remedies must have been prosecuted at law within a prescribed period, were designated. The period varied according to the character of the right or injury, or the form of action to be pursued. The bond of an administrator was not subject to any bar the statute created. It Avas never, in the first instance, the subject of a suit at law - against either principal or surety. Before it could become the subject of such suit, the liability of the administrator must have been fixed by an independent suit at law against him in his representative capacity, or by decree of the court of probate, or of a court of chancery. The liability to legatees or distributees, was most often ascertained by a settlement of the administration and a decree in the court of probate. The settlement and decree, in the absence of fraud, was conclusive on the sureties, and if on the decree execution issued against the principal was returned unsatisfied, an execution could issue against the sureties. The proceedings in the court of probate were not embraced in any statute of limitations — they were statutory and bore no resemblance to suits at law. — Rhodes v. Turner, 21 Ala. 210, Harrison v. Harrison, 39 Ala. 499. The jurisdiction conferred on the court of probate to compel a settlement of the administration, and to render decrees against the executor or administrator in favor of legatees or distributees, did not divest the court of equity of its original jurisdiction over administrations, and in that court the legatees or distributees could maintain suits for an account of the assets, and a recovery of their legacies and distributive shares; and in such suits could join the principal and sureties in the administration bond. The remedy in equity was not within the terms of the statute of limitations, nor concurrent with or analogous to any legal remedy barred by the statute. There Avas, of consequence, no statute of limitations prior to the Code, operating on the demand of distributees or legatees against an administrator and the sureties on his bond. — Harrison v. Harrison, 39 Ala. 499; Rhodes v. Turner, 21 Ala. 210; Bedell v. Smith, 37 Ala. 625. It did not result, however, that there was no limit within which a legatee or distributee was required to invoke the aid of a court of probate, or of equity, to compel a settlement of the administration and á distribution of the assets. If twenty
The averments of the bill show the administration was, by the administrator, recognized as a continuing, subsisting trust, from its grant in 1843 to, his death, about the first of January, 1850. This recognition was by proceedings in the court ox probate in the regular and legal" course of a pending administration, and wras binding on the surety, preventing any bar, arising from the lapse of time, attaching". The death of the administrator was, however, a legal termination of the administration and its trusts, and from that period of time commenced operating as a bar to any proceedings by the distributees against the surety. The only remedy against him which could have been pursued, was in equity. The personal representative of his principal, the deceased administrator, could have been compelled to a settlement of his intestate’s administration in the court of probate, and a decree obtained against him for any devastavit the intestate may have committed, and for distribution. Such settlement and decree would not have been binding on the surety, nor could it have been made the foundation of a suit on the bond against him. — Gray v. Jenkins, 24 Ala. 516. Between him and the personal representative of his principal, there was no relation of privity which could render the settlement matter' of evidence against him. The privity rendering' a settlement made by the principal conclusive on him was personal to the principal, terminating with his death, and his administration. A judgment or a decree ascertaining and fixing the liability of the principal, being indispensable to a suit at law on the bond, against the surety, and there being no mode of obtaining such judgment or decree, after the death of the principal, which would be binding on or evidence against him, it follows the only remedy against him was in equity.
More than twenty-three years elapsed after the death of
At common law, as it prevails in this country, debts due by specialty or judgment, or mortgage, or by any species of contract, if unclaimed and without recognition for twenty years, in the absence of countervailing evidence, are presumed to have been satisfied. — 1 Green. Ev. § 39; Matthews Pres. Ev. 378; lPhill. Ev. 676, (n. 193). Originally, in the absence of a statute of limitations, a debt was, at common law, pre- • sumed to continue until its satisfaction or extinguishment was shown. However long it may have lain dormant, and in whatever of obscurity and uncertainty, its origin from the lapse of time may have been involved, evidence of its existence at any particular time, carried with it the presumption of continuance, and cast on the debtor the burden of proving its satisfaction or extinguishment. In courts of equity a different principle prevailed, and acting, as is said, “upon their own inherent doctrine of discouraging, for the peace of society, antiquated demands,” they refused to interfere when there had been “gross laches in prosecuting rights, or long and unreasonable acquiescence in the assertion of adverse rights.” — 2 Story’s Eq. § 1520. Against bonds, on which demand had not been made for twenty years, and upon which the obligees were proceeding at law, these courts were accustomed to grant relief on the presumption of their payment or satisfaction. Sir Matthew Hale was the first judge to adopt and apply the presumption at law, and he was folíowed
Again, in Bull v. Towson, 4 Watts & Serg. 569, it is said, “ Even in equity courts, twenty years is a positive bar, by repeated decisions, founded on sound principles,” and the court declined to consider whether an admission or promise, made by a trustee on whom it was sought to fix liability, after the lapse of time had run, would countervail the pre
The presumption had its origin in the same necessity and in the same public policy on which statutes of limitation are founded. “They are statutes of repose, to quiet titles, to suppress frauds, and to supply the deficiency of proof, arising from the ambiguity and obscurity, or the antiquity of transactions. They proceed upon the presumption that claims are extinguished, or ought to be held extinguished, whenever they are not litigated in the proper forum, within the prescribed period. They take away all solid grounds of complaint, because they rest on the negligence or laches of the party himself. They quicken diligence by making it in some measure equivalent to right. They discourage litigation by burying in one common receptacle all the accumulations of past times, which are unexplained, and have now from the lapse of time become inexplicable.” — Story’s Con. Laws, § 576.
In equity its application was to discourage stale demands and to prevent their enforcement at law.
At law it is applied to demands not within the letter of the statute of limitations. The laches of the creditor in failing to make earlier claim, is not so much regarded as the necessity of putting an end to litigation — the appointment of a period which shall foreclose all controversy.
In England and in several of the States of the Union, the presumption is by statute made absolute, unless repelled by proof of written acknowledgment, or of part payment made before the time had run. — 1 Green. Ev. § 39, note 2.
In McArthur v. Carrie, 32 Ala. 88, it is said, “ In this, as in most of the States of the Union, there is a growing disposition to fix a period, beyond which human transactions shall not be open to judicial investigation, even in cases for which no statutory limitation has been provided. This period is sometimes longer and sometimes shorter, dependent on the nature of the property and the character of the transaction.
"Without departing from these decisions, we can not hold the period of the war, during which the statutes of limitations were suspended, must be excluded in computing the twenty years, from the lapse of which the presumption of payment and satisfaction arises, creating a positive "bar to the demand preferred by the bill, in the absence of all evidence that it was within that period recognized or admitted as a subsisting liability. The suspension of the statute, is by force of Ordinance No. 5, of the Convention of 1865, (R. C. 53), and rests on the difficulty or impossibility of suit while the community were harrassed and perplexed by war, and the courts were either closed or embarrassed in the exercise of authority. This may acquit suitors from the imputation of laches, but the presumption rests not only on the want of diligence in asserting rights, but on the higher ground that it is necessary to suppress frauds, to avoid long dormant
It is perhaps true, greater force and a larger operation has been given the presumption by this court, than the current of authorities sanctions. It has been in obedience to a well defined public policy, which requires a fixed period of time that shall silence judicial controversies. Statutory enactment declares emphatically that no disability of suit shall extend the period of limitation, so as to allow an action to be commenced, entry or defense made, after the lapse of twenty years from the time the cause of action or right accrued.” — R. 0. 2910.
For more than thirty years the tendency of our legislation has been to narrow the period in which rights must be asserted and actions prosecuted.
In 1843, all actions for the recovery of lands, whether founded on title or the right of entry, or of possession, were limited to ten years, though former statutes had prescribed the period of twenty or of thirty years. The bond on which this demand is founded, had existed for more than thirty years when this suit was commenced. The principal is dead, and had been for more than twenty-three years before the suit. All the sureties are dead, insolvent or resident in other States.
So far as is disclosed by the bill, there is not a living witness of the transactions from which a liability is sought to be imposed. When the principal died, and for a long time thereafter, it is apparent his estate was sufficient to answer all.the demands of the appellants. The surety whose estate