45 Mo. 365 | Mo. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs brought suit in the Christian Circuit Court against the members of the firm of Nowlin, Howard & Co., for goods and merchandise sold them in the usual course of trade, which suit Howard alone defended, and pleaded the statute of limita
Few questions have been more zealously contested in the common-law courts than the one involved in this record. The case of Whitcomb v. Whiting, 2 Doug. 652, decided by Lord Mansfield in 1781, was for many years treated as establishing the doctrine that one of the makers of a promissory note, by the payment of the interest and part of the principal within six years (the limitation fixed by 21 Jas. I, ch. 16), took the case out of the statute as to the other makers as well. This case was for a time generally followed by the courts of the United States, and is still considered the law of England, and has been applied to all partnership debts, as well as to joint makers of a bill or note; and no distinction seems to have been made between a part payment before the statute had run, and one made .after the expiration of the time limited. The whole subject is learnedly discussed in the notes to the fifth edition of Angelí on Limitations, pp. 273-9; also in a note to section 324, Story on Partnership.
The general effect of a new promise or acknowledgment, which, had been the subject of such conflict of opinion, has been set at rest in Missouri by the adoption of the substance of the statute of 9 Edw. IV, ch. 14, so far as it pertains to this subject, wrhichis embodied in sections 28, 29, and 30, pp. 920-21, of Wagner’s Statutes, by which all such new promises and acknowledgments must be in writing. But the express exception made by section 30, that the statute shall not take away or lessen the effect of a part payment, leaves cases like the one at bar precisely as though it had not been adopted. The effect of such payments has been very elaborately considered in the Court of Appeals of New York, in Van Kenren v. Parmelee, 2 Comst. 523, and in Shoemaker v. Benedict, 1 Kernan, 176. In the former case the part payment was made after the statute had run and the defendant had been
Regarding this question as not an open one in Missouri, we must hold that the Circuit Court erred in deciding that the payment of part of the debt by one partner could not exténd the operation of the statute as to the others. The record in this case, sent up from the Circuit Court, is very badly got up and more than twice as long as was necessary or proper. It is full of repetitions — copying papers two or three times, for no apparent reason than to make costs. This practice should not be permitted.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings, with directions to the Circuit Court to tax one-third of the cost of transcript of the original record to the circuit clerk, and one-third to the plaintiffs, whose attorneys should have prepared a better bill of exceptions.