38 F. 707 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa | 1889
On the 21st of October, 1864, a judgment was rendered in the United States circuit court for the district of Iowa in favor of Michael McAleer against the county of Clay, Iowa, the cause of action being county warrants issued by the defendant. The judgment plaintiff having died in the state of New York, of which he was a resident, the present plaintiffs were in 1881 appointed administrators of his estate by the surrogate’s court for the county of New York in that state. On the 18th of November, 1888, tlie'present action was brought, to recover the balance alleged to be due and unpaid upon the judgment rendered October 21, 1864. A demurrer to the petition being filed, setting up that upon the face of the petition it appeared that the cause of action was barred by the state statute of limitations, the plaintiffs filed an amended and substituted petition setting up the fact that in May, 1881, the plaintiffs bad filed an information for a mandamus against the county and its officials, for the purpose of enforcing the levy and collection of a tax for the payment of such judgment; the information and the answer thereto being set out in full, the purpose thereof being to show that in said proceedings the defendant had admitted the existence of the judgment, and thereby defeated the running of the statute of limitations. The defend
Thus is presented the question whether the matters thus pleaded are of avail in meeting the question of the bar of the statute. By section 2529 of the Code of Iowa it is provided that—
“The following actions may be brought within the times herein limited, respectively, after their causes accrue: * . * * (4) Those' founded on unwritten contracts * * * within five years; (5) those founded on written contracts * * * within ten years; (6) those founded on a judgment of a court of record, whether of this or of any other of the United States, or of the federal courts of the United States, within twenty years.”
Section 2589 provides that—
“Causes of action founded on contract are revived by an admission that the debt is unpaid, as well as by a new promise to pay the same. But such admission or new promise must be in writing, signed by the party to be charged thereby.”
y As the petition upon its face shows that more than 20 years intervene between the date of rendition of the judgment sued on and the date of the commencement of this action, it follows that the action is barred, unless the right to sue is saved by reason of the other facts stated in the petition.
The first question for determination is whether the provisions of section 2539 are applicable to actions founded on judgments. By its terms it is limited to causes of action founded on contracts. In the section providing for the periods of limitation, actions founded on contracts are clearly distinguished from actions founded on judgments, and different periods are assigned to each. It seems to me, therefore, that the same distinction must be observed when construing section 2539. It is clear that within the meaning of section 2529 the present action is one founded upon a judgment, and not upon a contract. If it was founded upon a contract unwritten, the period of limitation would be 5 years, with the privilege of showing that it had been revived within 5 years last past by an admission or new.promise in writing. If it was founded upon a contract written, the period of limitation would be 10 years, with the privilege of showing that within the 10 years last past it had been revived by an admission or new promise in writing. , If founded upon a judgment, the period of limitation is 20 years; but upon what section of the statute can be based the claim that an admission or new promise will revive it? The very fact that the period of limitation is 20 years takes it out of the two classes of written and unwritten contracts, and it is only causes of action based upon contracts that can be revived by an admission or new promise under section 2539. But it is argued that the court may look beyond the judgment itself as a cause of action, and ascertain whether it was based upon contract, and, if it was, then hold that the cause of action founded on the judgment may be revived by a new promise or admission in writing. Certainly it is not so expressed in the statute, and there exists no good reason why exceptions should be grafted upon it not fairly within the language used. Suppose A. should negligently
Furthermore, to revive a suit based upon a contract under the provisions of section 2539, it is necessary that the 'written admission or new promise should be signed by the party to be charged therewith. The admission claimed to exist in the present case is found in the answer tiled in the name of the county to the information for the mandamus. The answer is signed solely in the name of the attorneys appearing for the county. In the case of Carpenter v. District Tp., 58 Iowa, 335, 12 N. W. Rep. 280, the supreme court of Iowa held that an indorsement* entered upon a warrant by the treasurer of the school-district, and signed by him, was not the act of the district township within the meaning of section 2539, for the reason that the treasurer had no authority to bind it by his contracts or admissions. The act done by the treasurer in indorsing the payments made upon the warrants was an official act wholly within the scope of his authority, yet it was held that it did not bind the district township as an admission or new promise. In the case at bar the attorneys doubtless had authority to sign the answer to the information, and lor the purposes of that case their action bound the county, but it is equally clear that an attorney has no general authority to contract for and bind a county by admissions or promises; and therefore, under the doctrine of the supreme court of Iowa in the case cited, it must be held that the answer to the information, being signed by the attorneys only, cannot bo held to be a writing signed by the county, within the meaning of section 2539. For these reasons the matters set forth in connection with the mandamus proceedings are immaterial, and the motion to strike the same from the amended petition is granted.
It is also sought to strike from the petition the allegation that since the bringing of this action the plaintiffs have had issued to them auxiliary letters of administration by the proper probate court of Iowa. The position of defendant is that foreign administrators cannot maintain an action for the recovery of the assets of the estate without taking out letters