30 Ind. App. 154 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1902
The claim of the appellee Sarah M. Ulmer against the appellant as executor of the last will and testament of Jacoh Stroop, deceased, was for money received by the deceased in his lifetime, in February, 1876, from the claimant, which he then promised to pay her, in the sum of $500 and for interest thereon at six per cent, per annum until October 1, 1899, in tho sum of $707.50; the total amount of principal and interest to that date being $1,207.50, with a credit, “by cash allowance of rent made
The defense of the statute of limitations was available on the trial without being pleaded by the executor. §2479 Burns 1901; Zeller v. Griffith, 89 Ind. 80; Pence v. Young, 22 Ind. App. 427.
Among the provisions of our civil code relating to the limitation of actions, it is enacted that no acknowledgment or promise shall be evidence of a new or continuing- contract, whereby to take the case out of the operation of the provisions of the statute, unless the same be contained in some writing signed by the party to .be charged thereby. §302 Burns 1901. It is also provided (§304 Burns 1901) : “Nothing contained in the preceding sections shall take away or lessen the effect of any payment made by any person,” etc. Evidence which was introduced .of statements of the debtor at various times, whatever the purpose of the introduction thereof, could not establish an acknowledgment or promise as evidence of a new <jr continuing contract, in the sense of §302, supraj such statements being not in writing, but oral expressions in conversations.
It was sought to take the case out of the operation of the statute by evidence relating to the alleged part payment credited in the statement of claim. The existence of the indebtedness of the testator to the appellee, contracted, without writing, in 187 6, was sufficiently proved. The evidence showed that in September, 1899, the testator, father of the appellee, visited the farm, which he owned, on which the appellee and her family, including her husband, resided; that on that occasion there was a conversation between the testator and the appellee’s husband near a cornci;ib on the farm,
Words not written and signed can not constitute a sufficient admission, but the act of payment in part, with its illustrative circumstances, including accompanying words, evidences the admission. The admission of continued indebtedness may be inferred as a matter of fact, and not of law, from the fact of part payment. Mozingo v. Ross, 150 Ind. 688, 41 L. R. A. 612, 65 Am. St. 387; Ketcham v. Hill, 42 Ind. 64.
“In order to make a money payment a part payment within the statute, it must be shown to be a payment of a portion of an admitted debt, and paid to, and accepted by the creditor as such, accompanied by circumstances amounting to an absolute and unqualified acknowledgment of more being due, from which a promise may be inferred to pay the remainder.” Wood, Limitations (3d ed.), §97. The payment must be made to the creditor or to some one lawfully acting in behalf of the creditor. Kisler v. Sanders, 40 Ind. 78-83.
If the creditor receive anything of value upon agreement between him and the debtor that its transfer shall reduce the debt, this will be a sufficient part payment to take the debt out of the statute. But there must be some transaction between the parties, such that the facts thereof would be available to establish on behalf of the debtor a defense of part payment in a subsequent action brought by the creditor for the recovery of the entire debt. If, by agreement, money is paid by a .debtor, on behalf of the creditor to a third person, this may be sufficient part payment as between the
It would seem, if, by agreement between tbe debtor and tbe creditor, by way of reducing the amount of tbe debt, the former releases a smaller debt due bim from a third person, this might operate as a part payment within tbe rule, and take tbe debt out of tbe statute. When tbe payment is made to a third person without authority to receive it, if the creditor ratifies it, it will operate to remove tbe bar of the statute. But a mere delivery of money to a third person to be paid over to tbe creditor on tbe debt is not alone sufficient. Wood, Limitations (3d ed.), §103; Stamford, etc., Banking Co. v. Smith, (1892) 1 Q. B. 765.
If money was paid to or for tbe appellee by her husband, such payment would not take tbe case out of tbe statute, unless it was paid by him on behalf of tbe testator, as bis agent, and on account of tbe testator’s indebtedness to tbe appellee. Harding v. Edgecumbe, 28 L. J. Exch. 313. Tbe appellee’s chose in action was her separate property, as if she were sole, under our statute.
Statements of tbe debtor at times other than -that at which be made tbe partial payment could not of themselves constitute promises or acknowledgments. If - a promise or acknowledgment to a stranger may be available, sufficient to revive tbe debt, these statements, not being in writing signed by tbe debtor as tbe statute requires, could be valuable only as admissions to show the intention of tbe debtor himself at the time be made tbe payment. See Brudi v. Trentman, 16 Ind. App. 512. A payment must be proved as a fact; evidence of tbe debtor’s mere parol statement of the making by him of a payment is not alone sufficient. That would leave tbe revival of tbe debt, otherwise barred, to rest wholly on evidence of words.
On tbe occasions, shown in tbe evidence, when, tbe subject of the alleged part payment was mentioned the appellee was not present in person, nor was she represented by
There was no agreement between the testator and the appellee or her agent concerning the matter of part payment. If it could be said that' appellee’s husband was acting as her authorized agent, he did nothing except the making of a request for the payment of money by the testator on the appellee’s claim. If it may be said that the testator authorized the appellee’s husband to pay to or for the appellee a certain sum on account of the debt which the testator owed the appellee, the husband for such purpose would be the agent' of the testator, rather than of the appellee, and it does not appear that the husband paid or agreed to pay any amount to or for the appellee as and for a payment upon the debt of the testator, or, indeed, otherwise- It must ap
' The land may have been paid for by the appellee alone or by her and her husband, or by her husband alone; and whatever he paid, if anything’, may have been paid without reference to the debt in suit. It does not appear that the testator’s proposal induced or influenced the purchase of the farm, which seems to have been in contemplation before the proposal was made. The release of the appellee’s husband by the testator from a debt which the former owed the latter would not be a payment to the appellee. The credit in the statement of plaim did not, by its terms, purport to be for a payment of cash to her by any person, but was for cash allowance of rent made October 1, 1899; and the evidence showed the testator’s offer to the appellee’s husband of an allowance or release to the latter of rent which the husband himself owed to the testator, with a proposal of the testator to the appellee’s husband that' the offered allowance to him should go upon the debt of the testator to the appellee. That there was a part payment rests in conjecture, rather than upon evidence of the fact.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.