81 Md. 446 | Md. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented by this appeal relates to the construction of section 5 of Article 57 of the Code, title, “ Limitations of Actions.” Both parties are non-residents of this State, the defendant being a Pennsylvania corporation, and the plaintiffs are citizens of and doing business in the State of Rhode Island, under the name of Mason, Chapin and Company. The plaintiffs sued out of the Superior Court of Baltimore City, on the 7th February, 1894, a foreign attachment against the defendant, the cause of action being a breach of contract by the latter. This attachment was laid in the hands of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company as garnishee, and the defendant corporation voluntarily appeared in the short note case and filed four pleas, upon three of which issue was joined, and to the fourth, which was the plea of limitations, the plaintiffs replied “ that the said defendant was, at the time said cause of action accrued to the plaintiffs, absent from the State of Maryland to-wit, in the State of Pennsylvania ; and thereafter was and continued to be and remained absent from this State up to within three years before bringing this suit.” To this replication the defendant rejoined: “ That the alleged cause of action accrued more than three years before the institution of this suit outside of the State of Maryland, and at the time of the accruing of said cause of action, both the plaintiff and defendant were non-residents of the State of Maryland and have never ceased to be non-residents, and said contract, on which this suit was instituted, was not made in this State, nor was any part of it to be peformed in this State.” The plaintiffs demurred to this rejoinder, and the Court below overruled the demurrer and gave judgment therein in favor of the defendant. From this judgment the plaintiffs have appealed.
The precise question is whether section 5 of Art. 57 of the Code applies to cases where both plaintiff and defendant are non-residents, and where the cause of action accrued outside of this State, and the contract sued on is a foreign contract.
It will be observed that the validity of the replication of the plaintiff must depend upon the construction placed on section 5 of Art. 57. That section provides that “ if any person liable to any action shall be absent out of the State at the time when the cause of action may arise or accrue against him, he- shall have no benefit of the limitation herein contained, if the person who has the cause of action shall commence the same after the presence in this State of the person liable thereto within the times herein limited.” This language is certainly broad enough to include within its terms the defendant. It could not be much broader than it seems to be made by the words, “any person liable to any action.” But comprehensive and all-embracing as it may seem to be, yet the language used in the statute must be construed and taken in the sense in which it appears to be used by the Legislature. The defendant suggests that an investigation or historical study of the origin and growth of the statute will show that its contention is the proper one, but after a careful examination of the old statutes, the original Statute of 21 James, 1, chapter 16, and 4 and 5 Anne, chapter 16, section 19, as well as the several statutes adopted by this State, all of which are based upon and in many re
In the Statute of James there was a provision in favor of “ any person or persons ” “ beyond the seas,” and the same provision appeared on our own statute until 1818, when the Act of that year, ch. 216, repealed it. It is true that the words “ any person,” &c., “ beyond the sea,” both in the Statute of James and our old statute, related to persons who were entitled to sue, but there was a similar provision in regard to defendants to be found in 4 and 5 Anne, ch. 16, sec. 19, by which it is provided that the statute should not run in their favor during their absence from the realm. And so, the words in section 5 of Art. 57, Code, relate to absent debtors, and the whole section is doubtless a modification of section 19 of the Statute of Anne. If these words, or similar ones, have been uniformly held, when used in the English Statutes of Limitations, from which ours are derived, to include both residents and non-residents, subjects and foreigners alike, then a like construction should be given to them, or similar words, when they appear, in our statutes. In Angel on Limitations, sec. 21, the correct rule is laid down for construing these statutes. He says, in speaking of the Statute of James I, as modified by that of 4 and 5 Anne, “ where any difference appears between the provisions of that statute in respect to personal actions and those of American Statutes of Limitations, it will be seen to be more in words than in substance, the end of one and all of them being one and the same.” * * * “And the mere change of phraseology in the revision of the statute before in force will not work an alteration in the law previously declared, unless it undisputably appeal's that such was the intention of the Legislature,” (see authorities cited in note.) In the case of Strithhorst v. Graeme, 2 W. Bl. 723, which was an action of assumpsit, the defendant pleaded non-assumpsit and limitations. The plaintiff, who was a foreigner, replied that he had been beyond seas, &c., in Germany and
And if that be so, why should'not the like provision in section 5 of Art. 57 have the same liberal construction? In England, under the Statute of 4 and 5 Anne, ch. 16, sec. 19, a foreign defendant could not plead the Statute of Limitations unless he had returned and been in England during the statutory period of limitation. Forbes v. Smith, 11 Exch. 161; Fannin v. Anderson, 7 Queen Bench, 811. And it has been uniformly held that the words “beyond the seas” is equivalent to “out of the State,” “out of the jurisdiction,” It was so held by this Court in Maurice & Worden, 52 Md. 291, and, therefore, if section 5 should be read as construed in that case, it would read as follows: “If any person, &c., shall be out of the State, beyond seas or out of the jurisdiction of the State ” at' the time the action accrues, &c., he shall have no benefit, &c. So read, section 5 would be identical with section 19 of Statute 4 and 3 Anne, ch. 16, which has always been held in England to include both residents and non-residents. Fannin v. Anderson, 7 Queen Bench, 811 ; Towns v. Mead, 16 C. B. 123 ; Forbes v. Smith, supra. Then, according to the terms of this section thus read, a citizen of Pennsylvania may be sued in our Courts, and it is conceded that, as against one of our citizens, a citizen of Pennsylvania cannot successfully plead the statute when sued here, if the former shall commence his action after the presence here of the latter within the statutory period, for it was so held in Hysinger v. Baltzell, 3 G. & J. 158. In White v. White, 1 Md. Ch. Dec. 57, it was held that the circumstance of the defendant in that case, being a non-resident, did not deprive him of the benefit of the Statute of Limitations of Maryland, because it was clearly shown that
It would also seem to be clear that the plaintiffs, who are citizens of another State, have the same right to sue here that a citizen of this State has, and it is difficult to understand upon what principle of justice or fairness the non-resident debtor should be allowed to plead limitations against a non-resident creditor, and not against one of our own citizens. All should be on the same footing. Frey v. Kirk, supra. And this would accord not only with justice, but would seem to be giving to non-residents nothing more than they have a right to demand. For it would not do to say that our citizens and citizens of other States would enjoy the same rights and privileges here, when, under our law, the latter would be absolutely barred from recovery by a plea of limitations, while it would not avail against the former. Paine v. Drew, 44 N. H. 314. And inasmuch as the right to set up limitations as a defence has no existence except by virtue of statute, we should not allow it to prevail any more in the one case than in the other, unless it can be clearly shown that there is some statutory provision requiring such a distinction to be made.
It was urged that the course of the plaintiffs is somewhat inconsistent, in that they seek to avoid the effect of defendant’s plea, because of the non-residence of the latter while the very action by which the defendant was forced into a Maryland Court is founded upon the same fact. While it is true the attachment proceedings were based on the non-residence of defendant, yet this is another case, in which, as the plaintiffs contend, the question of residence or non-residence is not .involved, but only the question of the absence or presence in this State of the defendant, without regard to residence. Nor is it correct to say that the defendant was compelled to appear to this action. On the contrary, its appearance was entirely voluntary. Fairfax Forrest Co. v.
We may now briefly consider another question raised by the demurrer, namely, the cause of action having accrued and the contract having been made outside the State, does such contract constitute such a cause of action as*is contemplated by section 5 of Art. 57. It was contended by the defendant that foreign contracts are not contemplated by this section, but that it relates only to contracts made in this State and to be performed here. But we think such a construction would be strained, and it was said by Jervis, C. J., in Lafonde v. Ruddock, supra, “the rejoinder now proposed is that the plaintiff is a Frenchman domiciled in France, and that the cause of action accrued there, so as to negative inferentially that the plaintiff returned to this country within the meaning of the proviso.” “ It seems to me,” he continued, “ that is seeking to put too strict a construction upon this Statute,” and it was held that “the mere circumstance of the cause of action accruing in France, and the plaintiff being a domiciled Frenchman,” was no answer to the replication that at the time the cause of action accrued
In Paine v. Drew, supra, Sargent, J., who delivered the opinion of the Court in that case, said: “The objection that our Courts will be crowded with stale claims from abroad, to the exclusion of their legitimate business, is purely imaginary. The fact that this question is now for the. first time directly raised, is a sufficient answer to the objection.”'
No authority has been produced to sustain the defendant’s position. On the contrary, a number of Courts' óf the highest authority have held, in construing statutes mófe or less like ours, that the more liberal construction is the more reasonable and just one. We will examine á few of 'them,
Judgment reversed and cause remandedfor new trial, . .
Robinson, C. J., Bryan and Briscoe, JJ., dissent: