Oothout v. Thompson

20 Johns. 277 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1822

Spencer, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action for fraud in the sale of a negro wench* in fraudulently representing her health and capacity for work. The pleas were not guilty, and not guilty within six years. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, on the question of fraud. The Judge reserved the question on the. operation of the statute of limitations, for the consideration of the Court. Neither the Judge, at the time, nor the par-, ties, could then have considered the facts on that point as doubtful, and as necessary to be passed on by the jury.

James O. Morse, a witness, testified, that he drew the note given by the plaintiff to the defendant, on the sale of the wench. It is dated on the 4th day of October, 1814, which he believed to be the true date j and he thought the sale took place on the day the note was executed. He also drew: a bill of sale between the parties ; and this being in the plaintiff’s possession, and not produced, to rectify any supposed mistake in the date of the note, we must conclude, that the sale was on the day the note bears date. The writ, in this case, was tested the 23d day of October, 1820 ; so that there were more than six years between the sale and the commencement of the suit.

In 1815, it appears that the plaintiff charged the defendant with cheating him in the sale of the wench ; the defendant did not deny it, but said he was willing to do what was right. The plaintiff’s counsel contend, that, from the evidence, it also appears, that the plaintiff did not discover the fraud, until within six years prior to the bringing the suit. As to this last point, it is disposed of, at once, by the case of Troup v. The Executors of Smith, decided in May term.*

The question then is, whether, if we consider the defendant as admitting the fraud, within six years, and de*279blaring he was willing to do what was right, such admission and declaration can take the case out of the operation of the statute.

The plea was, that the defendant was not guilty within six years ; the replication is, that he was guilty within six years, next before the commencement of the suit. Now, it is inconceivable, how an admission of the fraud within six years, can render the party guilty of committing it anew. It was consummated when the sale took place, and any subsequent confession relates back to that period. The confession of the fact, does not prove a new fraud, but the first and original one. The plaintiff, in his replication, has undertaken to prove, that the defendant was guilty within the six years : Proving that he had acknowledged the fact within six years, is no proof that the act was done within six years; and it does not support the issue. A case of this kind does mot stand upon the same principle, as the acknowledgment of a debt within six years. There, the acknowledgment is evidence of a new promise ; here, it is not evidence of a new trespass, and, therefore, there is no analogy between the two cases. This view of the case satisfies me, that, without inverting all the rules of logic, (and special pleading has been aptly compared to logic,) it is impossible to say, that a confession of a tort, is a reperpetration of it; and unless it is, the fact asserted in. the replication, that the tort was committed withir\ six years, is not made out, by a confession that the tort was committed more than six years before. But the absence of all authority, either from adjudged cases, or precedents of pleading, that an acknowledgment of a tort, within six years, will take the case out of the operation of the statute, would seem to be decisive, that no such principle exists, or has ever been recognised. The contrary doctrine, however, has been decided. In Hurst v. Parker, (1 Barnw. & Alder. Rep. 92.) decided in the Court of K. B. in 1817, in trespass for breaking and entering coal mines, and taking away coals, there was a plea of the statute of limitations, and replication thereto, in the affirmative. At the trial, no evidence was given to show that the trespass was actually committed within six years ; it was held, that evidence of a promise to make compensation, by the defen*280dánt, before the commencement of the action, and when he was threatened with an action for taking away coal, was not sufficient to support this issue, by which the plaintiff was bound to prove the affirmative, that he had a good cause of action within six years before the commencement of the suit. It will be observed, that in the case cited, the promise to make, compensation, was an admission bf the fact charged. I do not cite this case as authority, but merely to show in what light the point before us has been regarded by learned and eminent Judges.

Judgment for the defendant.

Vide ante, p. 33.