By the Court,
Two principal questions arise in this case; 1. At what time did the plaintiff’s cause of action accrue? and 2. If it accrued more than six years before suit brought, was there a new promise to .pay, or a sufficient recognition of an existing indebtedness from which to presume a promise ? According to the case of Beardsley v. Root, 11 Johns. R. 464, the defendant had received money for the plaintiff when he had received the harness, or money’s worth, and discharged the plaintiff’s demand against Genung. It does not appear that the defendant had any special authority to take harness or any other property on account of the plaintiff; he acted, therefore, upon his own responsibility, and comes precisely within the ease above cited. Having received the plaintiff’s money, he should either have remitted it to him, or given him notice of having received it, that the plaintiff might have called for it, or ordered it to be remitted. The defendant had actually remitted fifty dollars, as appears in the case, without waiting for orders for that purpose. Assuming that the defendant neglected to give the information to his client, and having converted to his own use his client’s money, why should he not be subjected to an action? It is said that in Taylor v. Bates, 5 Cow. 376, it was decided that an attorney is not liable for money collected till demand made or directions to remit; that he is not in default until he receives orders frpm his principal. ■ What was there said, was correct, in that case, and in all similar cases. In that ease, however, the defendant was not in default in repect to remittance ; he had informed'his principal of his receipt of the money, and waited for directions to remit. It is expressly said that “ no laches are shown on the part of the defendant or unwillingness to pay.” Can that be said in this case? Assuming, as we must from the testimony, that the defendant received the property of Genung and discharged his client’s debt, and neither gave information of the receipt of the money, nor remitted it to him for sixteen years, can it be said that there was no laches ? And yet this must be said to bring this case within the principle of the ease of Taylor v. Bates. But if an attorney may shield himself from responsibility upon the ground that no demand has been made, it does not follow that the client can excuse his laches by a principle which is intended to protect from costs an agent who has acted honestly and diligently in the business of his principal. Although the defendant may have been guilty of negligence in this ease, which would have subjected him to a suit, the plaintiff also has been guilty of negligence by which, in an ordinary case, he would have lost his right of action. He was informed in December, 1814, that his debt against Genung would probably be collected in the ensuing winter, and yet he makes no enquiry about it for sixteen years. Although, therefore, an attorney may protect himself from a suit by want of a demand, he is not for that reason, to be subject all his lifetime to demands however stale. If a demand was necessary in this case, the plaintiff should have made it in season to have brought his suit within six years, after the defendant had converted the property received by him to his own use. That conversion was made, according to the testimony, in the year 1815 or 1816. The plaintiff, therefore, should have brought his suit within six years from that time ; and it is no excuse for him that he had made no demand. It was his own fault that he had not put himself in a condition to sue, and he can never-take advantage of his own laches.
The next question is, whether there was a sufficient promise to revive the demand. The rule of this court, since the case of Sands v. Gelston, 15 Johnson, 511, and Bell v. Morrison, 1 Peters, 351, is, that there must be either an express promise, or a clear recognition of the present existence of the demand,
Motion to set aside report of referees denied.
