It is found as a fact that the defendant administrator
“
filed his final account, supported by proper vouchers,, in the office of the Clerk of the Court in 1865 or 1866, and by this return there was a small balance due the administrator by the estate.” This is, therefore, in effect, an action to surcharge, falsify and restate the account. The defendant pleads the six years statute of limitations, and also the statute of presumptions. The cause of action accrued when the final-account was filed, the running of the statute being suspended, as to those of the plaintiffs who were under age, until their majority, unless represented by a guardian.
Culp
v.
Lee,
The final account was filed
ex parte,
and had it been done since 1868 the six years statute of limitations would not have-applied, and the reference to take the account would have-been proper.
Woody
v.
Brooks,
102 N. C, 334;
The Code,
§ 158. Ten years would then have been the limitation applicable, and if pleaded it would have been incumbent upon the plaintiffs to show that their cause of action was not barred.
Hussey
v.
Kirkman,
95 N. C.,
63; Hobbs
v.
Barefoot,
But here the cause of action accrued prior to 1868, and the ■statute of presumptions is sufficiently pleaded. There was no express statute as to the length of time necessary to presume a release of the right to surcharge and restate a final account, duly filed and audited, but by analogy it seems to have been ten years, the same length of time which is now required by The Code, § 158, to bar such action. As already stated, after this plea was pleaded, it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to show that their action was brought within the prescribed time, .and if it was not, to offer evidence in rebuttal of the pre■sumption. The judgment below will, therefore, be modified so as to direct the account to be stated between the defendant .and Dennis Nunnery only.
This is not like the case of
Bushee
v.
Surles,
After January 1,1893, the same statutes of limitations will be applicable in all actions begun after that day, to causes of action accruing before 1868, as are now applicable to causes of action accruing since. Chapter 113, Acts of 1891. This will .avoid much confusion now incident to the application of the statutes of limitations and presumptions. The provisions of The Code in reference to the statute of limitations leave much to be desired. Many cases are left unprovided for, and in ■other instances the statute is confusiug and ambiguous. The *397 construction placed by the Court upon some of itslprovisions are, hence, not altogether reconcilable. It is desirable that the law-making power should enact, if possible, a simpler statute,, and a more comprehensive one, which would leave less to discussion as to its purport.
Per Curiam. Error — Modified.
