30 Miss. 264 | Miss. | 1855
delivered the opinion of the court.
No question is raised in reference to the title of the plaintiffs in error, derived under the will. But the plaintiffs in error having pleaded and insisted upon the Statute of Limitations in the Circuit Court, contend here, that the said statute barred the action ; and hence claim a reversal of the judgment.
The cause was submitted to the jury, upon an agreed state of facts. From these it appears, that the right of action of the defendants in error, accrued on the death of their mother, Mrs. Mina Dunn, who held a life estate in the subject of the controversy, which occurred on the 16th of August, 1843; and that Archer T. Dunn was born in September, 1823; Josiah B. Dunn, in 1825, and Mina Dunn, the wife of Samuel Parker, in 1828. Consequently, neither of these persons who are defendants in error, was of full age when the right of action arose.
It appears, further, that Josiah B. Dunn, one of the defendants in error, came to Mississippi in 1845, having never before that time been within the jurisdiction of this state. That Warren Masters, the intestate of the plaintiffs in error, having purchased the slave in controversy, from one Davis, in the State of Alabama, brought him into Mississippi in January, 1845; and that the said Masters held continued and adverse possession, claiming absolute ownership in the slave, until his death, which occurred some time after the institution of this suit.
This action was commenced on the 20th of June, 1851. Masters, through whom the plaintiffs in error claim title, was consequently in possession of the slave, claiming him as his absolute property for a period of more than five years next preceding the commencement of this suit. When Masters removed within the jurisdiction of this state, bringing with him the slave, its laws attached. It will, therefore, not be questioned, that the Statute of Limitations barred the action and vested in him a perfect title, unless the defendants in error are within the saving of the statute, in regard to persons “under the age of twenty-one, femes covert,” &c.
In the case of Marsteller et al. v. McLean, 7 Cranch, 156, it was said by Judge Story to be a settled rule, that all the plaintiffs in a joint action must be competent to sue, otherwise the action cannot be supported. He cites Perry v. Jackson, 4 Term R. 516, which was probably the first, and is the leading case on the subject. These cases have been followed by the courts in this country; and is unquestionably the rule generally recognized in cases in which one of the plaintiffs was under no disability to sue when-the right of action accrued.
The rule in Marsteller v. McLean is laid down in the broadest terms, and would seem to be applicable in all cases, whether all or only some of the plaintiffs in a joint action, were laboring under a disability to sue at the time the right of action accrued.
But it is worthy of remark, that in the case cited from Durnf. & East, which was a suit upon a bill of exchange, brought by co-partners, only one of the plaintiffs was within the saving in the statute, in regard to subjects who were resident beyond seas; and that the reasoning of Lord Kenyon shows very clearly, that the judgment would have been different, if all’the plaintiffs had been within the saving when the cause of action arose; and that in Marsteller v. McLean, although this question was presented by the record in that case, no distinction was taken between cases in which one of the parties is not under disability at the time the action accrues, and where all are. The distinction appears to have escaped the attention of the counsel and the court. It is possible that a different result, in any event, would not have followed. It
Great respect and deference is due to so exalted and learned a tribunal; and we should not, without some hesitation, dissent from any opinion expressed by it, even in reference to our own statutes, designed exclusively for the regulation of the domestic concerns of the citizen, the construction of which, is the exclusive province of the state courts. But the decision of the Supreme Court in Marsteller v. McLean, was not .a decision made upon our statute, nor in direct reference to any other statute. We may, therefore, disregard it as an authority in deciding the question, whether in cases like the one at bar, in which all the persons entitled to a joint action are within the age of majority when the cause of action accrues, the statute runs against any until the disability of infancy is removed as to all ?
This question must be determined by the proper construction to be put upon the language of the statute, which is as follows:— “ If any person or persons, who is, or are, or shall be entitled to any of the actions specified in the three preceding sections of this act, is, or are, or shall be at the time of any such action accruing, within the age of twenty-one years, feme covert, or insane, then such person or persons shall be at liberty to bring such action, so as he, she, or they, institute, or take the same within such time as is before limited, after his, her, or their coming to or being of full age, discovert, or of sane memory, as by other person or persons having no such impediment, might be done.”
Under statutes similarly worded and of identical meaning, it has been held generally by the courts in this country, that if one of several persons entitled to a joint action be under no disability, from infancy, coverture, &c., when the right of action accrues, the statute will run as to all. The reason is obvious. The words of the statute, in their plain and literal meaning, “ do not apply to such a case; they extend only to cases in which the person, in
The same principle, applied to cases in which all the persons having a joint action are under disability when the cause of action accrues, shows conclusively, that the statute does not run until such disability is removed as to all. The words of the act, in their plain and literal signification, extend to such cases; and necessarily prevent the running of the statute, until all the persons entitled to a joint action are relieved from disability.
We cannot better illustrate this proposition, than by quoting the language of the Supreme Court of Tennessee in Shute v. Wade, 5 Yerg. 1, in which this precise question is considered in reference to the saving clause in the act of 1715, chap. 27, § 9, of that state, which substantially, is the same as ours. The court say:— “But if all the persons entitled to a joint action are within the age of twenty-one years at the time such action accrues, then the action is within the saving, until ‘they’ who are entitled to it, shall become of full age. As the word ‘they,’ in the former case, includes all those entitled to the joint action, and one of them not being within the age of twenty-one, all of them are excluded from the saving; so in the latter case, if all are within the age of twenty-one when the action accrues, and so are within the saving, all must continue within the saving so long as one of them remains under the age of twenty-one, for until then, ‘ they’ have not attained ‘their’ full age.”
In the case above referred to, which was an action of trover, the cause of action accrued when all of the plaintiffs were within the age of majority. The statute bar was relied on as a defence to the action; but the court held, in accordance with the view above expressed, that the bar did not attach until all of the plaintiffs had arrived at the age of twenty-one years. And such seems to be the settled doctrine in that state. Wade v. Shute, 5 Yerg.
The same operation has been given by the courts of Kentucky to the eighth section of the act of that state concerning limitations, which in no material respect differs from the statutes of Tennessee and this state, on the same subject. Jones v. Henry, 3 Litt. 48; 7 B. Monr. 236; 3 Monr. 63;. Ib. 146.
In the State of South Carolina it is the settled rule, that in trespass to try title to land, the minority of one co-tenant would prevent the operation of the Statute of Limitations. Gourdine v. Theus, 1 Brev. 326; Henry v. Mears, 2 Hill, 333. In suits at law, for the recovery of personal property, a different rule is applied; and it is holden, that in such an action by several joint plaintiffs, to which the Statute of Limitations is pleaded, one party not barred, may recover to the extent of his interest, and the others fail. 2 Ib. 329. But in that case, one of the plaintiffs was of full age when the right of action accrued. It is therefore no authority in the case under consideration.
We have been cited to a decision of the Supreme Court of Alabama, in which, as stated by counsel, the rule laid down in Marsteller v. McLean, was expressly applied in a case, in which all of the plaintiffs were under disability at the time when the cause of action accrued; but wo have not had access to the volume containing the decision.
Upon the most mature consideration which we have been enabled to give the subject, the rule recognized by the courts of Kentucky and Tennessee, appears to us to be the correct one. We, therefore, are of opinion that the Statute of Limitations did not commence to run until Mrs. Parker was of full age, and consequently that the action was not barred.
Judgment affirmed.