106 Pa. 440 | Pa. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court,
The only question in this case is whether it should have been determined by the court or the jury. The court decided it by directing a verdict for the plaintiff. The question was one of payment. The claim was a scire facias to revive a judgment entered more than nineteen years before the writ issued. The judgment was entered by Addison J. Hess against himself and in favor of his wife on October 1, 1863, upon a note for 83000 dated April 3, 1860, but really executed shortly before the judgment was entered. The wife died in January, 1870, and her husband, the defendant in the judgment, in November 1882. After his death letters of administration upon the wife’s estate were taken out by her son-in-law Tobias G. Frankenfield and it is he who issued the present writ of scire facias.
It was contended on the trial that the great lapse of time coupled with the other facts and circumstances in evidence authorized a presumption of payment, but the learned court below without delivering any opinion or charge directed the jury peremptorily to return a verdict for the plaintiff for the whole amount of the judgment with interest from its date to the day of the verdict. In this we think there was error.
In the recent case of Peters’s Appeal (ante, ¡o. 341), our brother Paxson, delivering the opinion of the court, said— After a lapse of twenty years mortgages, judgments, and all evidences of debt are presumed to be paid: Foulk v. Brown, 2 Watts, 209: and a recognizance in the Orphans’ Court: Beale v. Kirk, 8 Norris, 415: and in less than twenty years with circumstances payment may be presumed: Hughes v. Hughes, 4 P. F. S., 240; Brigg’s Appeal, 12 Norris, 485. After twenty years the law presumes that every debt is paid, no matter how solemn the instrument may be by which such debt is evidenced, and such presumption stands until rebutted.” In Moore v. Smith, 31 P. F. S. 182, we said “ a legal presumption of payment does not indeed arise short of twenty years, yet it has been often held that a less period with persuasive circumstances tending to support it may be submitted to the jury as ground for a presumption of fact.” In Henderson v. Lewis, 9 S. & R. on page 384, Gibsost, J., said: “ When less than twenty years has intervened, no legal presumption arises; and the case not being within the rule, is determined on all circumstances, among which the actual lapse of time, as it is of a greater or less extent, will have a greater or less operation.” In this case a period between sixteen and seventeen years had elapsed
The question of payment is a question of fact, and therefore its proper determination is within the province of the jury. In a given case, if there are no circumstances tending to aid the presumption of payment, and the presumption does not arise for want of the necessary time, it would be the duty of the court to so instruct the jury and withdraw it from their consideration. But in this case, it seems to us, there were circumstances, some of them of a highly persuasive character, which tended to support the presumption, and therefore it became the duty of the court to submit the whole of them, including the lapse of time, to the determination of the jury. It was proven that the only persons entitled to the estate of Mrs. Hannah Hess, the plaintiff in the judgment, were her husband, the defendant, and her daughter by a former marriage, Mrs. Tobias Gr. Frankenfield. Mrs. Hess having died in 1870, her husband was entitled to the exclusive administration of her estate, and to take one half of all her personal estate, including this judgment. But as no one else but her 'daughter was entitled to the other half, there would be no necessity for administration unless there were debts, of which there is no evidence, and, speaking from this lapse of time, no probability. It was entirely competent, therefore, for her husband and her daughter to divide her personal estate without administration if they saw fit to do so. In point of fact, the daughter, Mrs. Frankenfield, and her step-father, the defendant in the judgment, did have a settlement on March 28, 1871, in which she gave him several receipts, one of which was as follows: “ Received, March 28, 1871, of Addison J. Hess, my full outset, as agreed between us, and I hereby
It is not necessary now to decide whether this paper was conclusive upon Mrs. Frankenfield, as a paper which it was competent for her to execute under the power conferred by the Act of April 11, 1856, authorizing married women to execute refunding bonds and other instruments in discharge of legacies and distributive shares, as that question is not before us. But wo are very clear that the fact of Mrs. Frankenfield’s giving this release was a persuasive fact in support of the presumption of payment of the judgment in this ease, and as such was for the determination of the jury and not of the court. Seven years had already transpired from the entry of the judgment without any demand being made by the wife for its payment, so far as the evidence goes, and at the time of the trial twelve years more had elapsed, during all of which it was competent for Mrs. Frankenfield to make claim for the money from her step-fatlior, and to have administration granted upon her mother’s estate if pajnnent was refused, and yet there is no proof that any such demand was made. While It is true she had no claim during the first seven years, yet that length of time was an important periftd in the age of the judgment, which ought to have prompted her to action when her right did attach. It is certainly not proper for a court to say that when a paper of this character is given by a person so circumstanced, it is to have no weight, and is of no consequence in the case, and must therefore be disregarded by the jury. That is a matter for the jury alone to determine in connection with the other facts in the ease. The mere giving of such a paper is corroborative of the presumption from lapse of time increasing in force as time goes on. • • '
Again, it was competent for the husband, at any time after his wife’s death, to take out administration upon her estate, and, as administrator, to enter satisfaction upon the judgment, being liable, of course, to account for its value in the settlement of his administration account. Does the fact that he did not do this add to the force of the presumption or detract’ from it? This also is for the jury. It does not appear that Mrs. Frankenfield or her husband ever demanded any interest or any part of the principal during the twelve years (almost)
Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awarded.