73 N.Y. 189 | NY | 1878
The defendant on the 2d of August, 1872, signed and delivered to the plaintiff an instrument not dated, in these words: "Received January, eighteen hundred and sixty-one (1861), from Mrs. J.R. Kincaid, the sum of sixteen hundred dollars ($1,600), for which I agree to pay interest at the rate of seven per cent from this date. Paid January, 1866, to Mrs. Kincaid on the above, two hundred dollars."
It was shown that on the 1st of January, 1861, the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $1,600 for money loaned, and that no payment of principal or interest had been made on the debt except the sum of $200 paid in January, 1866. The only question is whether the receipt executed August 2, 1872, revived the claim and took it out of the statute of limitations, or in other words, is the receipt a written acknowledgment or promise within section 110 of the Code. That section is substantially a transcript from the English statute of Geo. IV., chapter 14, section 1. In England before that statute, and in this State prior to 1848, *192 an oral promise by the debtor to pay a debt barred by the statute of limitations, or an unconditional acknowledgment of the debt as a present subsisting liability, was sufficient to take it out of the statute. (Danforth v. Culver, 11 J.R., 146; Sands v.Gelston, 15 id., 511.)
The rule that an oral acknowledgment or promise was sufficient for this purpose, subjected a defendant to the risk of being charged by proof of admissions, misunderstood or perverted from their true meaning, and the statute of Geo. IV. was passed to remedy this inconvenience and hardship, and to substitute the certain evidence of a writing signed by the party, for the insecure and precarious testimony which was before permitted. The statute, however, did not, as was said by TINDAL, C.J., inHayden v. Williams (7 Bing., 163), intend to make any alteration in the legal construction to be put upon acknowledgments or promises made by defendants from what before existed, but simply to change the mode of proof. What prior to the statute would have been a sufficient acknowledgment or promise, was after the statute sufficient, if reduced to writing, signed by the party to be charged, and in Lechmere v.Fletcher (3 Tyr., 450), it was accordingly held that it was not necessary that the written promise or acknowledgment should state the amount of the debt, but that this could be shown by oral testimony.
The instrument signed by the defendant in this case acknowledged the receipt from the plaintiff, in January, 1861, of the sum mentioned therein. The further statement that he had paid $200 of this sum in January, 1866, and his undertaking to pay interest, conclusively repels any inference that the money was received as a gift or in payment of a debt, and clearly implies that the transaction was a loan. There is no express promise to pay the principal, but the promise to pay interest imports that there is an existing debt upon which the interest was to accrue, and the statement that $200 was paid in 1866 is an admission that the balance of the debt was unpaid. It is claimed that as the instrument contains an express promise *193 to pay the interest, no promise to pay the principal can be implied. But it is to be observed that no interest had been paid from January, 1861, and although the words "interest from this date," unexplained by the context, would be deemed to refer to the time when the paper was executed, we think in this case they refer to the date of the loan stated in the first clause of the same sentence, and that they were inserted to show that interest was to be paid from that time, and not for the purpose of limiting the obligation of the defendant to the payment of interest only, to the exclusion of the principal.
There being no date to the receipt, parol proof of the time of its execution was allowed against the objection of the defendant. It was doubtless an essential part of the plaintiff's case to show that the receipt was given within six years before the commencement of the action. The proof was properly admitted. The general rule is that when the time of the execution of a written instrument becomes material it may be proved by parol, even in opposition to the date when it contains one. (SELDEN, J.,Draper v. Stow,
It being shown in this case that the paper was executed in August, 1872, it stands as an acknowledgment at that date of a liability for the loan made in 1861.
We think the judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.