2 Vt. 146 | Vt. | 1829
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
It appears that Hutchinson & Dunham were merchants, transacting business in company in Woodstock, from the year IS19 to 1824; and between September, 1819, and 30th of August, 1823, employed the deceased, Timothy Cox, to do services for them ; that Hutchinson & Dunham, during that period, and up to June, 1824, kept an open account with him, wherein their charges amounted to $196,58, and had given him credit to nearly that amount. It would seem that Cox was either an illiterate man, not capable of keeping a book account, or had placed confidence in Hutchinson and Dunham to keep the entire
Were the balance of the account in favor of Cox’s estate, there can be no doubt but that an entry made by Hutchinson & Dun-ham of either debt or credit within six years, would furnish evidence upon which the administrator could recover such balance; and the same might be said of Cox’s book, had he kept one; for there is as little doubt, that the book of either party furnishes better evidence against him, when the credits are more than the debt, than it would for him, if the balance stood in his favor.
The principle of law is as well settled perhaps as any, both in England and our neighboring States; that where books are kept by both parties, an entry of an item of debt or credit within six years, draws after it those of longer standing, and the statute is no bar to a recovery of the balance; for the statute does not inflict the loss of the debt as a punishment for the delay: on the contrary, where the accounts are of more than six years’ standing, and no new transaction has taken place between the parties, forming new items of account, the presumption is, that the accounts have been settled and paid off, though the balance is not struck. But that presumption of law may be removed, and is, where there is an acknowledgment that the accounts have not been settled, or a new promise to pay the balance, and the entry of a new item or credit, is an acknowledgment of an unsettled account between them. And where one party chooses to leave it for the other to keep the entire accounts between them, and the books shew debt or- credit, or both, as it does in this case, within six years, the evidence arising therefrom ought to be considered equally as strong as though each had kept his own, presenting the same items.
The cases, where the statute has been held a bar to all the charges which have been of more than six years’ standing, are those where all the items are. on one side, as in Cates vs. Harris, B. N. P. 149; in which a recovery was had for the last item Only, the statute barring the others.
There must be judgment for Hutchinson & Dmkmt, the ap