91 N.Y. 203 | NY | 1883
If the payment upon the note in question, on the 22d day of February, 1875, of $88.78, by the maker and the principal debtor, Ira W. Littlefield, was made by him in the name and behalf of the appellant and as his authorized agent, such payment was an acknowledgment of the debt, which was effectual to take the case out of the statute of limitations, and a promise of the appellant to pay the balance of the note. If it was authorized by the defendant, it was the same as if it *206
was his own act and an unequivocal recognition by him of the existence and validity of the debt. It is by reason of such a recognition that partial payments are available in cases of this kind. The reported cases all agree upon this question. (Shoemaker v. Benedict, 1 Kern. 178, 185, 190; First Nat.B'k of Utica v. Ballou,
In regard to the motion for a nonsuit the distinct question is presented whether there was any evidence to submit to the jury as to the authority of Ira, as the authorized agent of the appellant, to make the payment in question. In Winchell v.Hicks (supra), the action was brought upon a joint and several promissory note, made by a principal and three sureties, which became due before the Code of Procedure went into operation. Five years afterward the holder called upon two of the sureties for payment, and was referred by them to the principal, who was informed of such reference, and made a payment, and it was held that the payment was such an acknowledgment of liability as to arrest the running of the statute of limitations against the two sureties. In the case cited ALLEN, J., at page 561, says the question is, "whether there is any direct recognition of the debt, or of the agency of Bowman, who made the payments, by the other defendants," and then after proceeding to state the testimony in regard to the subject somewhat in detail, he lays no stress upon the evidence as showing that any agency was created, and says: "It is sufficient that, so far as Tanner is concerned, there was an express recognition, an unqualified and subsisting admission of the debt, and of his present liability and willingness to pay it," * * * and that while he was liable to pay it the judge asks, as to Hicks, "was not his declaration a sufficient recognition of the debt to bind him?" He also holds at pages 565 and 566 that the verbal acknowledgment binds, because the debt was contracted prior to the Code, and was not within the provisions requiring such acknowledgment to be in writing. DENIO, J., and JOHNSON, Ch. J., concurred on the ground of the verbal acknowledgment, because the debt was contracted prior to the Code and was not within the provision requiring such acknowledgment to be in writing. The *208 head-note of the case also shows that the decision of the court was upon this ground, and none other is stated therein, viz.: That the request of the sureties to get pay of the maker was obligatory as a verbal acknowledgment of the debt. It does not appear that the case was decided upon the ground that an agency was conferred by the request of the one paying to bind the other by his own act and payment.
It would, therefore, seem that the case cited is not an authority for the doctrine that an agency was created under the circumstances stated in said case. This case is referred to in some subsequent decisions. In the case of Payne v. Gardiner
(
In the case of Harper v. Fairley (
We are also of the opinion that there was no ratification by the appellant of the payment made by his son. The most that can be claimed is that the appellant expressed himself as gratified that his obligation on the note was decreased. This was not a ratification within the authorities. In the case of The FirstNat. B'k v. Ballou (
No other points made require special attention and for the errors stated the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed. *211