97 Ga. 587 | Ga. | 1895
This was an action upon a promissory note, not under seal, which was executed and by its terms made payable in the State of Alabama. . The note was dated February 9, 1888, and was payable on demand. The suit was filed April 17, 1894. "Upon the note were unsigned entries reciting the payment of certain amounts thereon on August 7 and August 23, 1888. By an amendment to the declaration the plaintiff alleged that these amounts were paid on the dates mentioned, and that by the law of Alabama partial payments upon a note not barred by the statute of
In this State all actions upon promissory notes not under seal must be brought within six years after the same become due and payable. (Oode, §2917.) The note sued upon was payable on demand, and therefore was due immediately. (Code, §2791.) In order for a partial payment upon a note to constitute a new point from which the period of limitations will begin to run, the payment must be entered upon the note, and the entry must be made in the debtor’s own handwriting, or subscribed by him, or some one authorized by him. (Code, §§2934, 2935.) And the holder of the note cannot be the agent of the debtor to malee such an entry. (Shumate v. Williamson, 34 Ga. 245; Wright v. Bessman, 55 Ga. 187.) If, therefore, the case is controlled entirely by the law of this State, the action was barred, it appearing that more than six years had elapsed from the time the right of action accrued until the suit was filed, and it not appearing that either of the alleged payments on the note was entered thereon by the debtor or by any person authorized by him.
It is well settled that the limitation of actions is controlled by the lex fori, and not by the law of the place where the contract was made or is to be performed. This was conceded; but it was contended that the rule is differ
We do not agree with counsel in this contention. This provision of the code is declaratory of a rule which prevails xmiversally among civilized nations, and which is applied in determining as to the nature, validity and interpretation of contracts; and it is not to be so construed as to conflict with the rule, equally well established, that matters respecting remedies on contracts, such as the mode of procedure and proof, and the time within which suit shall be brought, are regulated by the law of the forum, or place where the suit is brought. A law prescribing the manner in which a new promise, or a payment from which such a promise will be implied, shall be evidenced in order to extend the period within which suit may be brought upon a contract, relates to the remedy, and does not affect the intrinsic validity of the promise. The question of what evidence shall be required for this purpose in an action upon the contract is one thing; the question whether a promise not so evidenced is valid or not is another and different thing. The statute referred to is in the nature of a statute of frauds, its object being the prevention of fraud and perjury and the avoidance of the uncertainties to which parol evidence is exposed, (Watkins v. Harris, 83 Ga. 683), and it should be applied as well in cases like the present as in cases where such a
It follows from what has been said, that the court below ought to have sustained the demurrer and dismissed the action. Judgment reversed.