Plaintiff’s assignors were German subjects residing at Berlin and on March 17 and March 19, 1917, two causes of action, governed by a six-year Statute of Limitations, accrued in their favor against defendants. On April 7, 1917, the existence of a state of war between the United States and the Imperial German Government was declared by Congress and that status continued until June 2, 1921, when peace was formally proclaimed. The statutory time within which suit could have been brought did not expire until nearly two years after the close of the war, but this action was not begun until January 7, 1927. Does section 27 of the Civil Practice Act now allow the enforcement of a remedy, or is that section modified by section 28? The two sections are cast in these words: “ § 27. Effect of war on right of alien. Where a person is disabled to sue in the courts of the *253 State by reason of either party being an alien subject or citizen of a country at war with the United States, the time of the continuance of the disability is not a part of the time limited for the commencement of the action.
“ § 28. Disability must exist when right accrues. A person cannot avail himself of a disability unless it existed when his right of action or of entry accrued.”
No question is before us except one of legislative intent. No other substantial issue was argued in the courts below or decided by them. Constitutional questions cannot for the first time be raised in this court.
(Dodge
v.
Cornelius,
These enactments read by themselves, without reference to their history, warrant only one deduction. On their face they cannot justify different inferences. They compel the conclusion that the pendency of a state of war constitutes a disability to suitors who are citizens or subjects of the hostile powers and that advantage of such disability is not available to either party unless it existed when the cause of action arose. The power of unambiguous language is exhausted in the phrasing of these two sections. Juxtaposition is not necessarily controlling, but location, considered in relation to the use of the words “ disabled ” and “ disability ” in both sections, supplies an additionally clear guide to interpretation. Unless plain language be disregarded, section 28 must be held to apply to every disability defined in the Civil Practice Act and necessarily includes the one resulting from a state of war as plainly as those arising from infancy, insanity or imprisonment as provided by sections 43 and 60. Appellants reject this interpretation and contend that, historically, the use of the word “ disability ” would indicate that such use was made rather for the sake of rhetoric than for statutory intention or purpose and that a disability caused by the existence of a state of war must be treated in a manner similar to a suspended right to sue caused by an injunction as provided in section 24 of the Civil Practice Act. This contention, according to our view, is refuted by the circumstances under which sections 27 and 28 were introduced into statutory form.
Before the adoption of the Revised Statutes, certain principles had been announced in three cases which are
*255
cited by the parties to this appeal. In
Clarke
v.
Morey
(
The first statutory enactment on the subject is 1 R. S. sec. 32, art. 4, chap. 4, title 2, part 3 (1st ed. page 298) which provides:
‘‘
§ 32. Whenever any person shall be disabled to prosecute in the courts of this State, by reason of his being an alien subject or citizen, of any country at war with the United States, the time of the continuance of such war, shall not have been deemed any part of the respective periods limited in the first and second Articles of this Title, for the making of any entry, or the commencement of any action.” The first article of this title creates limitations of time in respect to actions relating to real property. The second article of the same title deals with limitations respecting actions for the recovery of any debt or' demand or for damages only. The third article of this title, relating to time limitations governing actions for penalties and forfeitures which might be maintained by an individual against another individual, is not included within the protection of section 32. The codifiers of the Revised Statutes referred to
Jackson
v.
Pierce
and
Bailey
v.
Jackson
in their report made to the Legislature January 2, 1828 (Vol. 4, ch. 4, tit. 2, art. 4, § 35, footnote) in respect to chapter 4, title 2, article 4, and stated: “ As an alien enemy cannot sue during war, it seems unjust to deprive him of all remedy, for not doing what our laws forbid him to do. In 10 J. R. 417, and 16 do 210, the supreme court considered war, in such a case, sufficient to repel the legal presumption of payment. The reason seems equally applicable to the statute of limitations.” The common-law disability which Chief Justice Spencer described in
Bailey
v.
Jackson
was thus converted into a
statutory disability.
The length of time which at common law was taken into consideration in arriving at a presumption is not governed by rules controlling a Statute of Limitations. Wlien the statute once begins to run, it continues to run, notwithstanding any subse
*257
quent disability.
(Peck
v.
Randall,
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Cardozo, Ch. J., Pound, Crane, Lehman, Kellogg and Hubbs, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.
