26 Mass. 488 | Mass. | 1830
afterward drew up the opinion of the Court. Two questions are raised by these pleadings. The first is, whether the original cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations ; and if so, then, secondly, whether this action can be maintained on the new promise made in 1822.
As to the first question, it seems to us very clear that the statute of limitations is a good bar to the original cause of action. If the defendant was within the Commonwealth at the time the action accrued, it is admitted that the action should have been brought within six years from that time. The notes are all payable on demand, and the precise and simple question is, at what time an action accrues on a note of hand payable on demand, and m money. The answer is, that it accrues imme
Then can this action be maintained on the new promise ?
In the replication to the plea to the fourth, fifth and sixth counts, it is averred that this new promise was made on the 17th of April, 1822, that always afterwards, viz. from the 17th of April, 1822, to the date of the writ, the defendant had been absent from the Commonwealth, and that he had no property within the State that could by ordinary process be attached. If the defendant had been living within this State at the time this new promise was made, an action no doubt would lie at any time within six years after, and the statute would not operate as a bar. If the defendant in such a case had pleaded, that the cause of action did not accrue within six years before the commencement of the action, the plaintiff might reply that it did ; and the new promise would support the affirmation of the issue. The reason is, that the new promise is regarded as a new cause of action upon which the statute operates in the same manner, and for the same period of time, as it did before on the original cause of action. Or it may be considered that the original cause' of action is revived, and the statute again commences its operation ; and this operation is limited by all the exceptions contained in the statute. Indeed the new promise is essentially a new cause of action. In the present case, before the promise in 1822 these demands had been long barred by the statute.
If the debt remained, the remedy was gone; and there was no subsisting cause of action. The new promise therefore was a new cause of action, for without it there was no cause of action.
The same decision was made in the case of Ward v. Hunter, 6 Taunt. 210, and in the case of Green v. Crane, 2 Ld. Raym. 1101, and in Sarrell v. Wine, 3 East, 409. But these were exceptions to the general rule. By the English cases it is settled, that if an action is brought for or against an executor after the lapse of more than six years from the death of the testator, on a promise made by or to the testator, and a new promise made by or to the executor is relied on to take the case out of the statute of limitations, the plaintiff cannot declare on the original promise. So in the case of Pittam v. Foster et al. the plaintiff declared on a promissory note made by Foster and Mary Norris, dum sola. The defendants pleaded actio non accredit infra sex annos, and the plaintiff relied on an acknowledgment of the debt by Foster within six years. But it appearing that Mary Norris had been married more than six years before the action was brought, the court held that the evidence of the new promise did not support the issue. This was certainly yielding very far to a technical difficulty ; a difficulty too which is not very obvious, for by the pleadings, the time when the action accrued was put in issue, and not the time of the promise. And it is hard to reconcile this case to the principles laid down by the same court, soon after, in the case of Thornton v. Illingworth, 2 Barn. & Cressw.
The defendant is clearly liable to an action on the new promise, and the statute could not. be pleaded in bar. Or the plaintiff might amend by transferring the averments in the replication to the declaration, and setting forth the original cause of action as the consideration of the new promise. But there is no reason for turning the plaintiff round to a new action, or to require him to amend the declaration. The form of the pleadings cannot vary the construction or operation of the statute. We must regard substance rather than form, and substantially the new promise is the cause of action, whatever may be the form of the declaration.
Judgment for plaintiff on fourth, fifth, and sixth counts.
See Chitty on Contr. (4th Am. ed.) 636 a; Ruffv. Bail, 7Har. & Johns. 14 ; Darnall v. Ml Gruder, 1 Har. & Gill, 439.
Unless, however, the demand is made within a reasonable time, the plaintiff will not be entitled to relief in equity. Codraan v. Rogers, 10 Pick. 112
Where bills of exchange are made payable at a particular place, no ación can be maintained until after a demand at that place and a dishonor
See Chitty on Contr. (4th Am. ed.) 641; Bell v. Morrison, 1 Peters, 373,
This exception embraces those who were never resident in the Common wealth. Sissons v. Bicknell, 6 N. Hamp. R. 557; Little v. Blunt, 16 Pick 359; Byrne v. Crowninshield, 1 Pick. 266, note 1; Bulger v. Roche, 11 Pick. 39 40.