35 Ala. 560 | Ala. | 1860
We have recently considered the question, whether it is indispensable .to the maintenance of a bill for the rescission of a contract .on the ground of fraud, that there should have been an antecedent restoration, or offer of restoration, of what the complainant had received under the contract; and we regard that question as settled in the negative. — Garner, Neville & Co. v. Leverett, 32 Ala. 410; Bailey v. Jordan, ib. 50. See, also, Abbott v. Allen, 2 Johns. Ch. R. 519; Parham v. Randolph, 4 Howard’s (Miss,) R. 435; Edwards v. McLeay, Cooper's Ch. Cas. 308; S. C., 2 Swanst. 302.
The act approved February 15th, 1854, (Pamphlet Acts, ’53-54, page 71,) presents no obstacle to the operation of section 1372 of the Code upon causes of action existing when the Code went into force. That act'restricts the application of the provisions, of chapter 21, title 1, part 3d of the Code, to causes of action commencing on or after the day when the Code went into operation. But that restriction does not reach section 1372, which is not found in the designated chapter. The act of 1854 further provides, that causes of action accruing, and possessions commencing, prior to the time when the Code went into operation,' shall be controlled by thepre-existing statutes of limitations, which -were “ re-enacted,
We feel constrained to decide, in contravention of the remark made in Ridgway v. McAlpine, that the complainant’s right of dower fell under the operation of the statute of limitations of three years, on the 17th January, 1853, when the Code became the law, and was barred in three years from that time. On the 8th February, 1858, an act was approved which amends section 1372 of the Code, so as to make it applicable only where the land out of which dower is claimed was aliened by the husband; but that act cannot affect the question here, for the bar against the complainant was complete before the adoption of the act; and it is an established principle, that the repeal of a statute of limitations does not impair a bar perfected before the repeal. — See the authorities collected in note 3, section 22, of Angell on Limitations ; United States v. Burford, 3 Peters, 30.
The chancellor erred in deciding against the equity of the bill, and his decree must be reversed, and the cause remanded.