This appeal presents the question whether war suspends the running of a statute of limitations against one: who, though a citizen, is in enemy country. - If so, the further question is presented whether actual access to the court during the war through counsel, in the circumstances hereinafter stated, continued the running of the statute which otherwise would have been suspended.
On October 13, 1934, a money judgment was entered in favor of appellant against the appellee in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, now the United States District Court. In the District of Columbia the life of such a judgment is twelve years unless it is revived. 1 15 D.C.Code § 101 (1940). No action shall be brought and no scire facias or execution issued on a judgment after the expiration of twelve years. Id. § 102. If, however, during such period the creditor causes a scire facias to be issued and a fiat thereupon follows, the judgment is extended in effect for twelve years from the date, of the fiat. Id. § 107. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 81(b), 28 U.S.C.A., and the Rules of the District Court § 30(a) abolish the writ of scire facias and substitute an appropriate motion.
On September 22, 1948, more than twelve years after the date of the judgment, appellant filed a motion in the District Court to revive and extend it. The motion was denied.
I. The code provisions, 15 D.C.Code §§ 101, 102 (1940) contain no exceptions which enlarge the twelve year period, though, as stated, an extension is permitted by action to revive taken within that time. (Id. § 107). No such extension was obtained in this case. Since the Revolutionary War, however, American courts have tolled statutes of limitations because of war. A suspension has been held to occur by reason of provisions in the treaty ending the war, as in Hopkirk v. Bell, 1806,
“Total inability on the part of an enemy creditor to sustain any contract in the tribunals of the other belligerent exists during war, but the restoration of peace removes the disability, and opens the doors of the courts. Absolute suspension of the right, and prohibition to exercise it, exists during war by the law of nations, and if so, then it is clear that peace cannot bring with it the remedy if the war is of much duration, unless it also be held that the operation of the statute of limitations is also suspended during the period the creditor is prohibited, by the existence of the war and the law of nations, from enforcing his claim. * * * the disability to sue becomes absolute by the declaration of war, and is a conclusion of law. * * * Grant that the law of nations is that debts due from individuals of the enemy may, by the rigorous application of the rights of war, be confiscated, still it is a right which is seldom or never exercised in modern warfare, and the rule is universally acknowledged that if the debts are not so confiscated, the right to enforce payment revives when the war has terminated.”
See, also, Ross v. Jones, 1874, 22 Wall 576,
We think it cannot be disputed that the war between the United States and Italy had the effect of suspending for the; period of its duration the statute of limitations applicable to action upon or revival of the judgment in this case unless some special circumstances prevent the application of the general rule. Appellant was in enemy country during the full period. This placed her in the status of an enemy for purposes of the Trading with the Enemy Act. 50 U.S.C.App. § 2 (1946), 50 U.S.C.A. Appendix, § 2. United States v. Krepper, 3 Cir., 1946,
II. On December 4, 1942, an attachment and garnishment issued on behalf of appellant in the District Court to satisfy the 1934 judgment. The garnishee answered. Appellant moved for oral examination of the garnishee. The appellee, the judgment debtor, objected on the ground, inter alia, that appellant was residing in the Kingdom of Italy, was under the control of a country with which a state of war existed with the United States and payment of any money by the garnishee was prohibited by the Trading with the Enemy Act, supra. The District Court allowed the motion for oral examination, thus in effect overruling the objection. The Alien Property Custodian entered an appearance in the case. Trial was had before a jury upon the appellant’s traverse to the answer of the garnishee. A verdict was directed against the appellant for lack of evidence of any indebtedness of the garnishee to the judgment debtor. No appeal was taken.
In the above circumstances the District Court in ruling upon the motion now under consideration to revive and extend the judgment held that the law of the case required a decision that the court had
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had jurisdiction in the garnishment proceedings, as appellant herself then insisted, that she had not been barred in prosecuting her action on the judgment and that the statute of limitations accordingly was not tolled. This in our opinion is not the correct position. The tolling of a statute of limitations during a war is based upon two reasons. First, “we are not to send treasure abroad for the direct supply of our enemies in their attempt to destroy us”, and, second, “War, when duly declared or recognized as such by the war-making power, imports a prohibition to the subjects, or citizens, pf all commercial intercourse and correspondence with citizens or persons domiciled in the enemy country”, Hanger v. Abbott, supra. Where the Alien Property Custodian is able to. vest the proceeds or assets so as to prevent .their, reaching the enemy the first reason disappears. Such vesting would have been available to the United States in the circumstances of this case. See Birge-Forbes Co. v. Heye, 1919,
The exact question does not appear previously to have been decided. However, in First National Bank v. Anglo-Oester-reichische Bank, 3 Cir., 1930,
In the foregoing discussion we have referred to the period of the war in general terms; but the duration of the war should be considered in this case as limited to the period from December 11, 1941 to Ocotber 2, 1945. This is so because on the latter date the restrictions on business communication between the United States and Italy were lifted. See 9 Fed.Reg. 12425 (1945). The statute was accordingly suspended for three years, nine months and twenty-one days, thus extending the limitation in this case until August 1950, prior to which time the motion to revive and extend the judgment was filed.
I'll. Appellee contends finally that the ruling of the trial court permitting appellant to prosecute the attachment and garnishment proceedings notwithstanding she was in Italy and the war was on, established the law of the case which was binding on the court in passing upon the motion. The District Court upheld that contention in denying the motion. But the earlier ruling which permitted the garnishment and attachment action to proceed had to do with the question whether or not appellant then had the capacity to bring such action and whether the court could entertain it. The issue before the court below in the present case was quite different. When the court on April 19, 1943 overruled the motion to dismiss the garnishment no ruling was made or required with respect to the statute of limitations. The court was not called upon to consider and did not determine whether or not those proceedings prevented the tolling of the statute of limitations. When the motion to revive and extend the life of the judgment was subsequently filed the District Court was free to rule thereon as it thought proper. No law of the case had been established one way or the other as to the tolling of the period of limitations.
The order denying the motion we believe to be erroneous, and it is accordingly reversed.
Notes
. The judgment was affirmed on appeal July 29, 1936,
. The provisions of the Treaty of Peace with Italy concerning Periods of Pre *617 scription contained in § B of Annex XVI [61 Stat. (Part 2) 3475] are made inapplicable to the United States by virtue of § D(2) of the same annex [61 Stat. (Part 2) 1478].
. Section 8 of the Trading with the Enemy Act, supra, after specifically providing for suspension of. the running of the. statute in certain circumstances, states: “* * * nothing herein contained shall be construed to prevent the suspension of the running of the statute of limitations in all other cases where such suspension would occur under existing law.”
. It has also been held that the institution of an action on behalf of an infant will not terminate his disability so as to start the statute of limitations running against him. Geibel v. Elweil, 1895,
