20 Mo. App. 656 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action on a promissory note for $1,244.37, executed by the defendant, January 6,1872, and payable one day after date, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum.
The petition states that the defendant paid on said note, February 29, 1872, one hundred and fifty dollars, and June 3, 1874, the further sum of two hundred and five' dollars, and that the residue is due and unpaid. Suit was instituted September 19, 1883.
The only defence interposed, is the statute of lirni
The plaintiffs took issue on the answer by reply. On the trial of the cause, the plaintiffs, against the defendant’s objection, were permitted to read in evidence the note sued on and the indorsements of payment thereon. The indorsement in controversy was made by one Robert L. Wilson, and is in the following words and figures':
“Land sold under deed of trust, June 3, 1874, for the sum of two hundred and thirty dollars ; cost of sale, printer’s fee, fifteen dollars ; commission of trustee, expense of deed and acknowledgement, ten dollars. Total ■costs, twenty-five dollars. Net proceeds of sale, two hundred and five dollars, which amount of two hundred and five dollars I place as credit on this note, June 3, 1874.
“ Robert L. Wilson,
“Trustee of the deed of trust.”
The only additional testimony on this subject was that of Wilson, who testified as follows: “I drafted a deed of trust which was executed by Arthur P. Asher, the defendant herein, and his wife, conveying to me, as trustee, in said deed of trust, the land herein described to secure the note here sued on. I afterwards sold the land by virtue of the power given me in said deed of trust, and Wm.Y. Leach, one of the plaintiffs, became the purchaser. As such trustee, after deducting the costs and expenses of sale, I entered and indorsed credit on the back of the note here sued on, for the amount received for the sale of said lands described in the deed of trust, less said costs and expenses of sale. My recollection -is that the indorsement of credit is of the same date as the day of sale.”
The defendant demurred to the evidence on the ground that it did not disclose a right in the plaintiff to recover. The court refused so to declare and rendered judgment
Our statute of limitations, as far as it defines the effect of a new promise or part payment, is similar to that now in force in most of the states. It re-enacts in substance the statute 9 Edw. 4, ch. 14, by which all new promises and acknowledgments must be in writing, but makes an express exception by stating that nothing therein contained shall alter, take away, or lessen the effect of a payment of any principal or interest made by any person. Such was the law when the alleged part payment in this case was made, and has so remained ever since'. Gen. Stat., 749, sects. 28, 29, 30; Rev. Stat., sects. 3248, 3249, 3250.
It will be thus seen that while the statute provides that the payment of any principal and interest, made on any debt by any person, shall have the same effect as it had prior to the re-enactment of the statute of 9 Edw. 4; it neither states what that effect shall be, nor by what person such payment may be made, so as to have the effect, but remits us for an answer to these inquiries to the adjudged law on that subject.
The reasoning of the courts on this question has not always been strictly logical. The great weight of authority outside of this state, treats a part payment effectual only as evidence of a new promise, and holds that before such part payment can have the effect of arresting the running of the statute, it must be made either by the promisor, or by some person clad with.authority by bim to make a newpromise on his behalf. Shoemaker v. Benedict, 11 N. Y. 185; Harper v. Fairley, 53 N. Y. 445; United States v. Wilder, 13 Wall. 256 (80 U. S. bk. 20, L. Ed. 682); Anderson v. Robertson, 24 Miss. 389 ; Roscoe v. Hale, 7 Gray 274; Kallenbach v. Dickinson, 100 Ill. 431; 3 Sm.L. C. (6 Am. Ed.) 862-890, and notes to Whitcome v. Whiting.
In this state, however, that rule has not been strictly adhered to. It was decided at an early day in Craig v. Callawag Co. Ct. (12 Mo. 94), by a majority of the court,
In Cape Girardeau Co. v. Harbison (58 Mo. 95), it was decided that an administrator could not, either by promise, or acknowledgment of the debt by part payment, prevent the running of the statute, wh reas, in Vernon Co. v. Stewart (64 Mo. 411), it was decided that he could, the court ignoring the fact that an adminis trator, under our laws, is a statutory trustee, with strictly limited powers, and not, as at common law, a representative of the deceased.
To the extent to which these cases go, this court is bound to follow the rule indicated by them ; on propositions lying beyond them, it is at liberty to follow what it considers the reason of the law supported by the weight of authority in this country.
It will be seen that in all these cases the payment was voluntary and not compulsory, and that in neither of them has the position been sanctioned that any person who has authority to pay any portion of the debt in controversy may bind the original promisor, by payment of such portion, to the payment of the residue. That holding would fritter away the statute. The statute of limitations is entitled to the same respect with other statutes and should not be explained away. Chief Justice Marshal, in Clementson v. Williams, 8 Cranch 74
In this case the trustee had power to sell the land and apply the net proceeds of the sale to the payment of
It results from tbe foregoing tbat defendant’s demurrer to tbe evidence should have been sustained. Tbe judgment is reversed and tbe cause remanded.