Woodruff v. Sanders

15 Ark. 143 | Ark. | 1854

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 29th of August, 1849, "Woodruff sued out a sci. fa. from the Pulaski Circuit Court, to revive a judgment recovered in bis favor in tbat Court, on tbe 26th day of July, 1833, against Pettit. Several pleas were interposed, upon which issues -were joined, among them the plea of payment. Subsequently, all of these were withdrawn, except the last named, upon which alone the case was heard and determined by the Court, without the intervention of a jury; and, upon the issue joined upon this plea, having been found for the defendant, judgment was rendered accordingly. A motion for a new trial was made upon the ground that the finding and judgment were against law and evidence, and that the deposition of Tunstall, which proved the payment, as plead, ought to have been excluded on the objection taken, “ that the interrogatories,” which appear in the deposition to have been written out, to be propounded to him, “were not answered,” although it does appear that the witness was sworn “to testify the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, in regard to the matters in controversy,” and accordingly made a connected and minute statement of all that he professed to know.

It is insisted, on the part of Pettit, without conceding the validity of this objection to the deposition of Tunstall, that the finding and judgment of the Court are sustained without regard to this deposition. ' And this, upon either of two distinct grounds, to wit: First, If the provisions of our statute regulating the common law rule, as to the presumptions of payment, does not reduce the period for a conclusive presumption of payment down to ten years, as to judgments rendered prior to the passage of that act, (which was the 5th of March, 1838,) but leaves it at twenty years, as at common law, then that the efflux of upwards of sixteen years, in combination with the facts in proof, that Pettit, from the day of the rendition of the judgment henceforward, resided in the county of Chicot, and -was, during the whole time, in good circumstances, and amply able to pay all his debts, and that an execution, to that county, was issued in the year 1833, soon after the rendition of the judgment, which could not now be found in the clerk’s office, fully authorized the Court below, sitting as a jury, in the absence of all rebutting testimony, of which, none was offered, to find in favor of the plea of payment, as was done. Secondly, If, on the contrary, the statute did reduce the period for a conclusive presumption to ten years, as to judgments rendered previous to its passage, then the Court was authorized to find as it did, in the absence of all rebutting testimony, upon the ground of the mere efflux of time alone, without any aid from the other facts in proof, much less any aid from the deposition of Tunstall.

At common, law, a debt was presumed to be paid if unclaimed and without recognition for the space of twenty years, in the absence of any explanatory evidence; this rule was applied, not only to bonds for the payment of money, but to mortgages, judgments, warrants of attorney to confess judgment, decrees, statutes, recognizances, and other matters of record. Before the expiration of twenty years, the law did not mate the presumption; nevertheless, the jury, upon an issue of payment, might infer the fact of payment from a lapse of time, short of twenty years, in combination with other circumstances in evidence, such as the settlement of an account in the intermediate time, or the obligee being poor and the obligor independent, or the parties residing in the neighborhood of each other, without any demand being made, and other like circumstances — the evidence to be more or less strong, in aid of the presumption from lapse of time, as the time is more or less short of twenty years. But although the full period of twenty years had elapsed, the law would not conclude that the debt had been paid, if the presumption was rebutted by evidence, such as proof of the defendant’s recent acknowledgment of the debt, or of payment of interest within twenty years, or of demand made within that time, or of suit brought and the writ returned non est inventus, or that, during part of the time, the plaintiff was an alien enemy, and disabled to sue, or that the courts of justice were closed, and the country in the tumult and confusion of war and revolution.

Thus stood the law, until our statute of the 5th March, 1838, in force March 20th, 1839, {Ghaf. XOl, Rev. Stat. of 1839, %>. 531,) wbicb cut down, tbe period, for this presumption of law from-twenty to ten years, upon judgments and decrees to be rendered after tbe passage of that act, and also provided that, that presumption should only be repelled by proof of part payment or of a written acknowledgment made within that period (30,) and which put all rights of action, upon emery instrumentfor the paymmt of money on property, upon the same footing (31). Thus regulating this common law doctrine so as to make it approach more nearly to the rule given by the statute of limitations, which perhaps- first suggested it, and in the wake of which it has followed. (See observations, as to this, in Brian vs. Tims, 6 Eng. R., p. 600, 1 and 2.) These provisions of the statute (both repealed by the act of the 14th December, 1844,) are easily enough understood, but there was a further one, as to judgments render edprior to the passage of the act, that the presumption of payment should apply to these in the “ same manner as such presumption applies to sealed instruments, ’’that is not altogether so clear (sec. 2 9 retained in Eng. Dig., Ch. 100, see. 32). These several provisions doubtless should be construed together, and, if possible, some meaning extracted which would give them all operation. And as judgments rendered prior to the passage of the act, are the express subject matter of the last cited section, it would seem to'authorize the assumption that it was the design of the Legislature to place these, as well as judgments rendered afterwards, and all instruments for the payment of money or property, which are provided for in the other two sections, 'upon some footing different from that upon which they stood at common law.

The leading ideas, to be extracted from this legislation, when considered in gross, is the cutting down of the common law period of twenty years, and the narrowing of the ground for repelling the presumption when thus cut down, both tending to points of policy, which the practical operation of the statutes of limitation have commended to the Legislature. If it be supposed that both of these objects were designed to have been attained by the Legislature, in reference to judgments rendered^wr to the passage of tbe act, as is plain was tbe design as to judgments rendered aft&rwarcls, and as to all instruments for tbe payment of money or property, tben there would bare been no occasion at all for discriminating between judgments rendered prior, and tliose rendered subsequent, to tbe passage of tbe act, as is expressly done in emphatic terms. On tbe other band, if it be supposed that it was tbe design to apply tbe presumption of law in question to these judgments, in all respects, as it was applied to sealed instruments at common law, tben tbe whole of section 29 amounts to nothing at all; because that was precisely tbe common law in its full length and breadth. If, however, it be supposed that'it was tbe design of tbe Legislature to discriminate in fmor of tbe rights of tbe plaintiff, as to judgments rendered prior to tbe passage of tbe act, each of tbe provisions of tbe three sections will be effective and sensible, and be in harmony with each other; and such a discrimination would be reasonable, because these statutory regulations of tbe common law doctrine of presumption ofpayment, are, in their terms, prospective as to judgments rendered after tbe passage of tbe act, and retrospective as to those rendered prior to its passage. Tbe Legislature might, therefore, with much reason, while cutting down tbe period for a conclusive presumption of law, as to both classes of judgments, from twenty to ten years, prescribe that, as to judgments rendered after tbe passage of tbe act, this presumption should reipam, conclmsi/oe, unless repelled by part payment, or a written acknowledgment of indebtedness, within tbe ten years, in analogy to a like provision in reference to tbe limitation of actions prescribed in Lord Tehtek-deN’s act, which they bad adopted as to this; while, at tbe same time, as to judgments rendered prior to tbe passage of tbe act, tbe presumption should be repelled, not only by these means, but by all tbe other means allowed at common law. As this construction allows all tbe provisions of tbe statute on this subject to be effective and sensible, and is reasonable, and no other, that has been suggested, comes up to this standard, we adopt it as tbe true interpretation of tbe legislative will. And when applied to tbe facts of tbe case at bar, tbe finding and judgment of tbe Court below are doubly sustained, although tbe plaintiff in error might be allowed tbe fullest benefit of every exception to tbe deposition of Tunstall, either taken in tbe Court below, or tbe additional one made here in argument; because not only is there no evidence in tbe record tending, in any way, to repel tbe conclusive presumption, of law, which attached after ten years, which tbe defendant bad tbe right to rely upon in support of tbe issue upon bis plea of payment in, but, in addition to this, be made proof of facts, and circumstances to fortify this presumption, bad it been attacked.

Putting tbe case then upon this point, tbe judgment must be affirmed, without reference to tbe other points raised.

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