51 Minn. 482 | Minn. | 1892
The acknowledgment which is relied on to toll the statute of limitations as to the two notes in suit is as follows:
“This note and the one attached to it are all right, and I think I can pay one hundred dollars on them, any way, next fall. Dated this March 26th, 1887.
[Signed] “D. Davis.”
The inflexible rule of this court, which is in accordance with the general current of authorities elsewhere, is that, to take a case out of the statute of limitations, there must be either an express promise to pay or an unqualified and unconditional acknowledgment of the debt from which a promise is implied.
As expressed in Bell v. Morrison, 1 Pet. 351: “If there be no express promise, but a promise is to be raised by implication of law from the acknowledgment of the party, such acknowledgment ought to contain an unqualified and direct admission of a present subsisting debt which the party is liable and willing to pay.” Of course, the willingness to pay need not be express, but is implied from the unqualified and unconditional acknowledgment of the debt. Moreover, the acknowledgment must be an admission, not that the debt was just originally, but that it continues due at the time of the acknowledgment. For our own decisions, see Whitney v. Reese, 11 Minn. 138, (Gil. 87;) Smith v. Moulton, 12 Minn. 352, (Gil. 229;)
But, even tested by these strict rules, we think the acknowledgment in this case was sufficient. It would be a very strained and unreasonable construction to hold that an acknowledgment that the notes “are all right” meant simply that they were genuine and originally constituted a just debt. Even if it stood alone, this could hardly, by any reasonable intendment, be construed as meaning anything but that the notes then constituted a valid debt.
But what follows (although insufficient as an express promise fo pay) leaves no room for doubt but that the preceding statement that the notes were all right was used in the sense they constituted a valid subsisting debt. So that, taking the whole together, it was equivalent to saying: “I acknowledge these notes as a valid claim against me towards the liquidation of which I think I will be able to pay at least $100 next fall.”
2. The written acknowledgment was entirely on one of the notes, and the parol evidence is that at the time this was written on it the other note (referred to as attached to it) was attached or pinned to it in the same manner as when produced on the trial. The point is made that the writing does not sufficiently identify the other note, and that parol evidence was not admissible to help it out. It is undoubtedly the rule that the written acknowledgment or promise must itself describe or furnish the means of identifying the debt or debts to which it refers, and that an insufficient written acknowledgment cannot be helped out by parol testimony. But this acknowledgment does identify the note as the one attached to the note on which it was written; and, this being so, parol evidence is admissible, if necessary to identify the note that was in fact attached. There is nothing against this in any of the cases cited by defendant.
3. The complaint declares on each note as a separate cause of action, the first being on the note upon which the acknowledgment was indorsed, and the second on the note referred to as attached to it. In the first cause of action, in order to take the case out of the statute, a new promise, after the bar of the statute had fallen, is alleged,
Judgment affirmed.
(Opinion published 53 N. W. Rep. 766.)