Court Opinion

ID: 6139271
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 14:30:52.839699+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:33.676152
License: Public Domain

The Surrogate.
Alexander Enden died May 20, 1848. Letters testamentary were issued to his widow and executrix, Magdaline Euden, July 18,1848, and on the 5th October, 1849, Samuel D. Flagg, and others, filed their petition, praying for the payment of certain claims against the estate of the deceased. The claims consist of two bonds, one dated Sept. 11, 1826, conditioned for the payment of $700 and interest, on or before 1st January, 1827; and the other, dated Dec. 11, 1829, conditioned for the payment of $1000 and interest, on or before 1st January, 18-30. Both the bonds are payable to Bachel Enden, who in June, 1848, assigned them to the petitioners.
The executrix in her answer, denies the execution of the bonds, and on the hearing set up orally by her counsel, that from lapse of time and other circumstances, the bonds should be presumed to have been paid. Although payment was not strictly pleaded, yet if a substantial defence could be made out on that ground, the pleading might be amended, and I will therefore proceed to consider the case upon the merits.
The bond due 1st January, 1827, comes clearly within the Common Law and statutory rule as to presumption of *194payment, twenty-three years having elapsed since a right of action thereon accrued. Indeed, this claim was abandoned by the counsel for the petitioners on the hearing. I cannot pass from this point, however, without remarking that the failure of this branch of the case must necessarily, with any mind, affect the demand on the other bond. The bonds appear to have travelled together, they were given, to the same obligee, transferred to the same assignees about the same time, and are presented together with the same averments as to their validity, and the indebtedness of the estate upon both. The bonds are, in a legal sense, independent instruments, but on an application of this kind after a lapse of so many years, even the slightest circumstances are not to be entirely disregarded.
As to the second bond, it became due 1st January, 1830, the very day when Section 48, 2 R. ¿S., 3d ed., p. 398, went into operation. That section declares, that after the expiration of twenty years from the time a right of action shall accrue upon any sealed instrument for the payment of money, such right shall be presumed to have been extinguished by payment, unless such presumption be repelled by proof of payment of a part, or a written acknowledgment of a right of action within that period.
The Revisers in their note to this section, say, “ It has been supposed useful to declare this doctrine of presumption, and define it with more accuracy than has been done by the Courts who speak of an indefinite time of eighteen or twenty years, or even a less period.” They refer for this opinion to the Executors of Clark vs. Hopkins, 7 John. R., 556, where the Court said, “ It has been decided (6 Mod., 22; 1 Burr., 434; 4 Burr., 1963; 1 Str., 652; 2 Str., 826; 1 Term R., 270, 271; Cowp., 109, 214), that after eighteen or twenty years, a bond will be presumed to have been paid, and the obligee ought to show a demand of payment, and an acknowledgment of the debt within that time, to rebut this presumption.”
The presumption of payment is always a question for *195the jmy. Before our statute, and in England, before the 3 dé 4. Will., 4, o. 42, § 3, the Courts by analogy to the statute of limitations, had established the artificial rule of presumption of payment already adverted to, on the ground that the most obvious presumptive proof of that fact, consisted in no demand having been made for a considerable time, and that where there was no payment of interest or other- circumstance to show that the demand was still in force, payment or release ought to be presumed by a jury. {Best on Presumptions, 188.)
But even though the statute be not pleaded, the fact of payment may still' be presumed by a jmy from lapse of time, and in connection with so long a time as eighteen or nineteen ■ years, “ the slightest evidence is sufficient,” or other circumstances which may render the fact probable. (Jackson vs. Sackett, 7 Wend., 94; Barr vs. Williams, 8 Pick., 187; Oswald vs. Legh, 1 T. R., 271; 3 Starkie's Ev., 823; Cooper vs. Turner, 2 Stark., 497; Sellen vs. Norman, 4 C. & P., 80; 2 Camp., 162; 1 Esp., 296.) In Colsell vs. Budd, 1 Camp., 27, Lord Ellenborough laid down the rule that, “ after a lapse of twenty years, a bond will be presumed to be satisfied, but there must either be a lapse of twenty years, or a less time, coupled with some circumstance to strengthen the presumption.”
“ The very fact of acquiescence or forbearance in him who has refrained to institute his claim, is in itself a strong presumption that it was the result of a consciousness on his part that the claim is unfounded, or at least, extremely questionable. Presumptions are always founded upon the ordinary course of things, and it is not very usual for a creditor to delay enforcing the payment of what has been for a considerable time due.” (Angell on Limitations, 10, 80, 96.)
How the bond which became due 1st January, 1830, was not presented to the obligor for payment in his lifetime ; at least, no proof of such a demand was given. It had been due eighteen years and fom’ months when the *196obligor died. No payment of principal or interest had then been made or endorsed upon it. The first demand was made upon the administratrix in November, 1848. I do not understand the petitioners as insisting that the administratrix made such acknowledgments at that time, as might fairly be construed into an admission of the demand. From what transpired then, I certainly ought not to give this claim any greater weight than it was entitled to before. (Angell on ¿mutations, 290.) Nor, on the other hand, ought the claimants to be prejudiced by what occurred at that time. Should the administratrix have distinctly rejected the claim, the claimant would not have been bound to have prosecuted it within six months after such demand, inasmuch as the section of the statute relied upon for sustaining that position, applies only to demands made upon and rejected by an executor or administrator, after an advertisement for claims according to law. (2 R. N, 3d ed., p. 152, §§ 87, 88, 41; Whetmore vs. Foose, 1 Denio, p. 159.)
There must be an advertisement to set this statute of short limitation running.
Laying aside the demand of payment in question, and bearing in mind that the claimants had eighteen months (Wenman vs. Mohawk Ins. Co., 13 Wend., 267) after the decease of Mr. Suden, during which the neglect to enforce their demand could not prejudice their case, the matter is brought back to a simple question of presumption of payment of a bond past due eighteen years and some months. If that question is to be determined by the rule laid down in the Eevised Statutes (upon which point some doubt may perhaps be entertained), the mere lapse of time would not be sufficient in itself to establish the presumption. But the statute has not altered the Common Law rule, that payment may be presumed from other circumstances in connection with lapse of time. Now I have been strongly impressed with this peculiar feature of the case. After remaining quiet for over eighteen years, the first act indi*197eating a determination to treat these bonds as existing and valid claims consists in the assignment of them, a month after the obligor was in his grave. Again, the assignees prosecute them here, through the intervention of an attorney,- who necessarily can only verify the petition by information, derived either from an inspection of the papers, or from the parties. The statute (2 A?. /S., 3d ed., p. 152, § 38) authorizes an executor or administrator, upon a claim being presented aginst the estate of a deceased person, to require the oath of the claimant that such claim is justly due, that no payments have been made thereon, and no offsets exist against the same. This is a wise provision, designed to reach the conscience of the claimant, and to bring to light facts known only to the deceased and the claimant, or of which the executor or administrator might be ignorant. A creditor seeking to enforce his demand in this Court, ought always to verify it in this mode, if it be contested ; and this is of necessity an oath which none but the creditor himself can take.
These bonds were assigned almost immediately after the death of Mr. Buden, a very important party to explain them, and throw light on the transaction. The petitioners depend merely upon the formal assignments, and there is not a solitary allegation verified by the obligee, or the petitioners themselves. The naked instruments alone are relied upon. With an acquiescence of eighteen years, and a sudden resurrection of the claim, on the death of the obligor, the formal transfer to third parties, and the absence of any verified allegation, except on the information of the attorney, as to payments and offsets, it would not, I think, be proper for me to order payment. These circumstances may be explained, but whether or not, I should be loth to exercise the discretionary power given me by statute, in a case like this. The law giving me jurisdiction (2 i?. /S'., 3d ed., p. 178, § 19), is not imperative (Kidd vs. Chapman, 2 Bar. Ch. R., 414); and where the claim of a creditor, presented under this section of the statute, has *198been rejected by the Surrogate after a full trial, it is no bar to a suit at law. (Fitzpatrick vs. Brady, 6 Hill., 581.) An action may be brought on the bonds under as favorable circumstances for a recovery, as if this application had never been made to me. If I were compelled to decide the case upon the merits, I should dismiss the petition. I prefer, however, to place the denial of the application.on the ground, that it does not seem to me a proper case for the exercise of the discretionary power given me by the section of the statute under which the petition is filed.