Printup v. Alexander & Wright

69 Ga. 553 | Ga. | 1882

Speer, Justice.

This was a suit brought, on the 19th of January, 1882. by the defendants in error, against the plaintiff for a balance claimed to be due on an account dated in July, 1873. To this suit plaintiff in error filed a plea of the statute of limitations.

On a trial had upon the appeal in the superior court, under the evidence and charge of the court, a verdict was returned for the plaintiffs for the amount claimed. The defendant made a motion for a new trial on various grounds set forth, which was overruled, and defendants excepted.

(1.) (2.) The first and second grounds were, that the verdict was contrary to evidence and the weight of evidence, and contrary to law.

(3.) Because the court erred in charging the jury as follows : “Actual or legal fraud is a good repleto the statute of limitations, and if the plaintiffs failed to sue in consequence of the conduct of the defendant, if it amounts to actual or legal fraud, then the plaintiffs would not be barred.”

This action was commenced to recover a balance due on this account over eight years after the same became due and payable by the record. The statute requires all actions upon open accounts, or for the breach of any contracts not under the hand of the party sought to be charged, or upon an implied assumpsit or undertaking, shall be brought within four years after the right of action accrues. Code, 2918.

The rigor of this rule is, however, softened and relieved by certain exceptions, by one of which the plaintiffs below sought to relieve himself of the bar, — that the statute enacted, “If the defendant or those under whom he claims *556has been guilty of a fraud by which the plaintiff has been debarred or deterred from his action, the period of limitation shall only run from the time of the discovery of the fraud.” Code, 2931.

It will be noted that the court changed “that actual or legal fraud is a good reply to the statute of limitations, and if the plaintiffs failed to sue in consequence of the conduct of the defendant, if it amounts to actual or legal fraud, then the plaintiffs would not be barred.”

The fraud which will relieve the bar, whether actual or legal, must be of that character which debars or deters the plaintiff from his action. A mere failure to sue by reason of the fraud will not avail, for when one promises verbally to pay by a certain time, if suit is not brought, and the plaintiff acquiesces and fails to sue and the bar attaches, will it be insisted that the promise unperformed would be such a fraud as would relieve the bar? We think not, Such conduct would be a fraud, and yet the statute declares a new promise to bind must be in writing, or else it is void. The statute of limitations is a favorite of the law; its wisdom and good policy have long been recognized, and the exceptions that save its operation must receive a strict construction, for they are exceptions to the avowed policy of the law.

We cannot endorse the language of this charge under the strict letter of the law. The fraud of which the defendant is guilty must be one by which the plaintiff was debarred or deterred from suing. “To debar,” says Webster, “is to cut off from entrance, to preclude, to hinder from approach, entry or enjoyment, to shut out or exclude.” To deter, by the same authority, is to discourage or stop by fear, to stop or prevent from acting or proceeding by danger, difficulty, or other consideration which disheartens or countervails the motive for an act.

Take the testimony submitted, and we see no such conduct as either debarred or deterred plaintiff from suing. It is true he may have relied upon a supposed promise to ad*557mit this debt asa set off to the judgment, if recovered, but there is no evidence of any definite agreement to that effect between plaintiff in error here and defendants, and even if it were, would that have precluded plaintiff from suing if he had seen fit to do so ? We think not. It was a mere uncertain and indefinite understanding upon no consideration and not binding in law. If a mere naked understanding on the part of one, and'a breach of it suspends the statute, then the limitation act would be a mere nullity, and the peace and repose which it promises never would be realized. If the fraud alleged cuts plaintiff off from suing, precludes him, or hinders him, shuts him out- or excludes him, then it debars, and the statute is suspended, but a mere promise by parol, and a failure to keep it, and without consideration, in our opinion, is not such a debarring as is intended, and does not save the bar from attaching.

The question presented here,under the facts, is one purely of law; with the merits of this controversy beyond the legal question involved, we do not propose to deal. The matters at issue are between gentlemen of the profession of high personal and professional standing, and we are called upon merely to settle the law under the facts in evidence, and feeling assured that the court below erred in his charge to the jury, upon the facts as they appear in the record, it is our duty to reverse its judgment and order a new trial. 4 Ga., 308; 60 Ga., 449; 12 Ga., 371; 63 Ga., 697; 58 Ga., 595; 64 Ga., 57; 65 Ga., 593, 638.

Judgment reversed.