22 Ga. 343 | Ga. | 1857
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Does the partial payment of a debt by the debtor, or the verbal acknowledgment of the debt by the debtor, destroy the effect of the statute of limitations upon the debt ? The decision of the Court below was that neither does.
The question turns upon what is the meaning of the Act of 20th February 1854, amendatory of the statutes of limitations. That Act is as follows:
“From and after the passage of this Act, no promise, acknowledgment, or admission, of a debt, made after the statute of limitations has commenced running, shall be sufficient to revive the same, unless such promise, acknowledgment or admission, shall be reduced to writing, or some note or memorandum thereof, made in writing, and subscribed by the person or persons making the same, or some other person thereunto by him lawfully authorized: Provided, this Act shall only operate upon and affect, such promises, acknowledgments, and admissions, as shall be made after its passage.” Acts of 1855-6. 238.
Every partial payment of a debt, implies an admission of the debt, and a promise to pay the balance of the debt. By the old law, any admission of a debt, or any promise to pay a debt, neutralized the effect of the statute of limitations on the debt. Hence it was, that by the old law a partial payment of a debt neutralized the effect of the statute of limitations on the debt. ,
By the new law, (the Act aforesaid,) no promise, acknowledgment or admission of a debt, unless made in writing, can neutralize the effect of the statute on the debt. By the new
And the new law, saying as it does, that no promise, acknowledgment or admission of a debt, unless made in writing, shall be sufficient to neutralize the effect of the statute upon the debt, says unequivocally, that no express promise or admission of the debt, shall have this effect.
In the present case, there was the admission and the promise to be implied from a partial payment of the debt, and there was an express verbal admission of the debt.
But according to the new law, such an admission or promise as these, could not neutralize the effect of the statute on the debt, because they were not in writing.
We think therefore, that the Court below was right
Judgment affirmed.