12 App. D.C. 586 | D.C. Cir. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The only question that is here submitted for our consideration is, whether, upon a cause of action which seems to have accrued, if it accrued at all, on April 22, 1886, the running of the statute of limitations is arrested by the mere filing of a declaration four days thereafter in the office of the clerk of the Supreme Court of the District, without the issue or service of any process whatever to bring the defendant before the court, and without any appearance by the •defendant, and without any steps whatever of any kind taken in the cause for upwards of nine years, when a new declaration was filed, process issued thereon, and regular proceedings thereafter had. The question is a novel one in this District; but we have no hesitation in saying that we think that it was rightly and properly decided in the judgment that was rendered by the court below.
The statute of limitations of James I, which is the foundation of all our American statutes of the same character, prescribes that certain actions, therein comprising the most usual actions at common law, should be “commenced and ■sued” within six years after the cause of action should have accrued, and not afterwards. The Maryland statute of 1715, which is yet in force with us, is in substantially the same terms, but with a shorter period of time. It provides that all such actions shall be “commenced or sued” within three years after the cause of action has accrued, and not after-wards. It will be noticed that the disjunctive conjunction “or” is here used, while the English statute uses the word “and.” The difference, however, seems to be immaterial. Under both statutes it has always been held, for their purposes, that the time of the suing out of the original writ,
But under the common law, as already stated, the original writ was, in fact, the first step in a cause; and it was entirely proper to refer to the suing out of that writ for the determination of the question of the application of the statute of limitations to the cause. In modern practice, and especially in practice under codes of procedure, the effort has been to assimilate the proceedings at common law to those in equity; and now very generally throughout the States of our Union it is provided, either by statute or by rules of court made under the authority of statute law, that actions at common law shall be commenced by the filing of a declaration, complaint or other equivalent pleading, setting forth in full the plaintiff’s cause of action, and serving as the foundation for all the subsequent proceedings. In
"Every civil action shall be commenced by filing in the clerk’s office a libel of information, bill, petition or declaration, as the case may be, and in case of appeal from a justice of the peace, justice’s 'papers and a transcript of his docket shall be filed on making the deposit required by law; or without such deposit, upon an order of the court or of one of the justices; whereupon the clerk shall immediately enter the case upon the proper docket, in the order of such filing, and number it accordingly.”
There were also other rules promulgated providing that a notice to plead should be subscribed to every declaration, and providing also a form of summons to be issued and served upon the defendant with a copy of the declaration and of the notice to plead. And under these rules the first and only service of process upon the defendant to bring him into court was of a copy of this summons attached to a copy of the declaration and of the notice to plead. The requirement of formal appearance was abolished, and the exigency of the summons was that the defendant, within the time limited, should plead to the declaration. It may be added, also, that it was and is the practice to endorse on the declaration a formal order by the plaintiff’s attorney to the clerk to file the declaration and to issue process thereon; and that thereupon the clerk, as of course, issues the summons and the copy of the declaration and notice to plead, and places the same in the hands of the marshal, who proceeds forthwith to serve them, upon being paid the fee allowed him by law for the purpose. There seems to be no
Under these circumstances, can we regard the mere filing of a declaration without service of process thereunder, and, as we are compelled to infer, without any intention to have such process issued or served, as sufficient to stop the running of the statute of limitations? We think not. It may be that, when a plaintiff has filed his declaration, and has done all that was incumbent on him to do towards the issue and service of process, and there has been failure of such issue or service, not through any act, intervention or omission on his part, he should not lose the benefit of his diligence, and the statute of limitations should not be permitted to intervene. And it may also be that, when a declaration has been filed in due time, and there has been due issue and service of process thereafter, such issue and service of process should be regarded as having relation back to the time of the filing of the declaration as the time of the commencement of the suit, and to the declaration itself as the first act in the suit. But how can a paper be regarded as the commencement of a suit, when no suit is intended ? A suit meins a legal proceeding to enforce one’s rights. It implies the existence of a plaintiff and defendant, and a demand by the one upon the other, that he shall render justice. How can a mere statement that one has a right to recover something from another, even though that statement should be filed with
Reliance is placed by the plaintiff almost entirely upon the express words of the rule of the court that actions shall be commenced by the filing of a’ declaration. He argues from this that the filing of the declaration is to be regarded as the commencement of the action with reference to the statute of limitations. That statute, as we have remarked, provides that actions must be “ commenced or sued,” or in the words of the statute of James I, “ commenced and sued,” within three years after the accruing of the cause of action. These terms imply something more than the mere filing of a paper with the clerk. They imply the commencement of a suit; and when no suit is intended, the force of the statute can not be avoided by lodging a paper with the clerk and calling it a declaration, when it serves none of the purposes of a declaration at law and was not intended to serve any such purposes.
The issue of process, it is true, is the act of the State through its duly appointed officers, as is likewise the service
The record in the present case gives indication that at the time of the filing of the declaration there was an order of some kind given to the clerk by the plaintiff, either by endorsement on the declaration or otherwise. The clerk’s docket entry, which is the sole record that remains of the transaction at the time of the supposed institution of the suit, has this entry and nothing more: “1886, April 26. Deposit towards costs, $8.00, by Webb; orders, <&c.; decl. filed.” The significance of the words “order, &c.,” we are not given to understand. But assuming, as would be most favorable to the plaintiff’s present contention, that they imply that there was endorsed upon the original declaration when that document was presented to the clerk for filing, ah order to file the same and to issue process thereon, yet it is quite evident that there was a contemporaneous oral order, antagonistic to such written order, and directing the clerk not to issue the usual writ, but to withhold it until further order. For the clerk did not issue the writ. And even if we should assume further that this failure to issue process was the result of the negligence of the clerk, in disregard of the explicit and positive order of the plaintiff’s attorney, which, of course, can not be presumed in the absence of proof, yet the plaintiff, by his subsequent action^ would necessarily be presumed to have acquiesced in it.
The conclusion, then, to be drawn from what we have said, and which seems to us to be dictated by sound reason and common sense, is that when a declaration is filed, with directions, either express or implied, given by the person on whose behalf it is filed, or by his attorney, to the clerk to issue the proper process thereon, and nothing then remains to be done but that the clerk should proceed, and the party has otherwise complied with the requirements of law, if other requirements there be, such as the payment of the necessary fees and the like, the suit must be deemed to be then commenced so far as to arrest the application of the statute of limitations. On the other hand, the converse of this proposition is, which we must likewise accept as a correct statement of the law, that the mere filing of a declar
In contemplation of law, this suit can be said to have been commenced or instituted only when the so-called substitutive declaration was filed and process sued out thereunder; and as the cause of action had then long been barred by the statute of limitations, the court below was right in so ruling; and the verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant, based upon that ruling, were right and proper.
The judgment appealed from, therefore, must be affirmed, with costs. And it is so ordered.