1 Keyes 332 | NY | 1864
When the Code went into operation, the right of action had already accrued upon both judgments, and the only question presented by the case, is, whether a written promise, in such a case, is necessary to take the demand out of the operation of the statute, rio question is made but that the promise would have been sufficient before the Code. Section 110 of the Code provides that “no acknowledgment, or promise shall be sufficient evidence of a new or continuing contract whereby to take the case out of the operation of this title, unless the same be contained in some writing signed by the party to be charged thereby. ” This is the last section of title two of the Code, which relates to the time of commencing actions. The first section of this title, § 73 of the Code contains this provision. “ This title shall not extend to actions already commenced, or to cases where the right of action has already accrued, but the statutes now in force shall be applicable to such cases, according to the subject of the action, and without regard to the form. ” The right of action having accrued upon these judgments, when this title of the Code became a law, such title did not extend to them, but left them to be governed by the law then in force. Such is the plain letter and reading of the provision, and I do not see that it is fairly susceptible of any different interpretation. It excludes a class of cases, embracing all upon which the right of action had already accrued. If the statute then in force had commenced running, all cases belonging to that class were left to the operation of such statute, and the provisions of title two of the Code did not in any way affect them. This precise point seems to have been decided by this court in Winchell v. Hicks (18 N. Y., 558, 566). In that case the note became due May 2, 1847, and the two sureties had by paroi acknowledged the indebtedness at some time between that period and May 3, 1852; and one of the points ruled was, that the case did not come within the provisions of the Code, and the debt might be revived or continued without any written promise or acknowledgment. The point was ruled in the same way in the case in the Supreme Court (21 Barb.,