211 Wis. 208 | Wis. | 1933
This action was commenced, in 1932, as an action at law to recover damages for deceit, by which plaintiff was induced to sell certain shares of corporate stock on March 22, 1924. Defendants demurred to the complaint on the ground that “the action was not commenced within the time limited by law, as provided by sec. 4222, Wis. Stats, of 1923.” The court sustained that demurrer and plaintiff appealed. It appears upon the face of the complaint that the fraud charged was committed on or prior to March 22, 1924. Plaintiff’s cause of action to recover damages for that deceit accrued on that date. As under the provisions of secs. 4219 and 4222, Stats. 1923, an action at law to recover such damages had to be commenced within six years after the cause of action has accrued, plaintiff’s cause of action, under the law in effect at the time of its accrual, became barred on March 23, 1930. In 1923, as well as prior thereto and thereafter, until 1929, there was an exception by virtue of sub. (7) of sec. 4222, Stats. 1923, in relation to “an action for relief on the ground of fraud in a case which was, on and before the twenty-eighth day of February, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven, cognizable solely by the court of chancery.” As to the cause of action in such a case, that subdivision of the statute provided that it “in such case is not deemed to have accrued until the discovery, by the ag
However, plaintiff contends that, although her cause of action had fully accrued on March 22, 1924, and would have become barred upon the expiration of six years from that date, it is not to be deemed to have accrued in view of the amendment of sub. (7) of sec. 4222, Stats., by ch. 24, Laws of 1929, until the facts constituting the fraud were discovered by her, which did not occur, according to the allegations in her complaint, until shortly before she commenced this action in 1932. Ch. 24, Laws of 1929, amended sub. (7) (which in the renumbering of the statutes in 1925 became sub. (7) of sec. 330.19, Stats. 1925, instead of sub. (7) of sec. 4222) by omitting from that subdivision, after the words “an action for relief on the ground of fraud,” the words “in a case which was, on and before the twenty-eighth day of February, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven, cognizable solely by the court of chancery.” The result of thus omitting from that sentence in sub. (7) the words, which theretofore restricted the class of actions for fraud, that are not deemed to have accrued until the discovery of the facts constituting the fraud, to those which were formerly cognizable solely in a court of chancery, was to extend the application of sub. (7) to all actions — whether at law or in equity — for relief on the ground of fraud.
“A subsequent statute, evidently intended as a substitute for one revised, operates as a repeal of the latter without any express words to that effect, and so any distinct provision of the old law not incorporated into the latter one is to be deemed to have been intentionally annulled. Smith, Stat. & Const. Law, § 784; Bartlet v. King, 12 Mass. 537.”
See, also, State ex rel. Board of Regents v. Donald, 163 Wis. 145, 147, 157 N. W. 782.
Plaintiff’s cause of action for deceit had actually accrued in 1924. That existing status of an accrued cause of action, under the law as it was until 1929, excluded all occasion for thereafter deeming that accrued cause of action as not accrued. There is no express • provision in ch. 24, Laws of 1929, because of which that enactment can be said to relate to causes of action which had actually accrued, under the law
“In any case when a limitation or period of time prescribed in any act which shall be repealed for the acquiring of any right, or barring of any remedy, or for any other purpose shall have begun to run before such repeal and the repealing act shall provide any limitation or period of time for such purpose, such latter limitation or period shall apply only to such rights or remedies as shall accrue subsequently to the time when the repealing act shall take effect, and the act repealed shall be held to continue in force and be operative to determine all such limitations and periods of time which shall have previously begun to run unless such repealing act shall otherwise expressly provide.”
“But we believe that in such case section 4976, Statutes of 1898 [370.06], which applies to all statutes, steps in and applies a rule that the limitation of one year having begun to run when the act of 1909 went into effect, and the latter act providing a new period of limitation, the former limitation statute is continued in effect as to such former acts.”
By the Court. — Order affirmed.