Court Opinion

ID: 3429403
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 19:58:17.833852+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:45:45.536505
License: Public Domain

This case was tried upon a demurrer to the petition. Accordingly, the facts must be taken to be those pleaded by the petition, filed December 24, 1942, as amended in January 1943, and are as follows: On April 17, 1920, defendant executed and delivered to Tillie Solmonson a promissory note for $2,000, due April 17, 1923, bearing interest at six per cent, with provision for attorney's fees in case of suit thereon. Endorsements on the back of the note show the payment of interest in full annually to April 17, 1929, and thereafter five payments of $25 and one payment of $10, the last payment being $25 paid May 7, 1937. Tillie Solmonson died intestate August 24, 1941, leaving her daughter, Luella Haug, as her only heir. Plaintiff is the administrator of the estate and contends that defendant acknowledged said debt and note unpaid, in writing, by certain letters signed by defendant, identified as Exhibits C, D, E, and F, in which letters Tillie Solmonson is referred to as "Aunt Tillie" and Luella Haug is referred to as "Luella." The petition demanded judgment for $3,720, with interest and costs including attorney's fees.
Exhibit B, attached to the petition, is a letter dated January 14, 1942, from Frank Nangle of Paw Paw, Illinois, to defendant, advising him that the note in suit had been placed in his hands for collection and asking for a payment thereon. Exhibit C is a letter from defendant to Nangle, dated January 18, 1942, apparently replying to Exhibit B, and states:
"In reply will say — during the depression we lost everything — farm, personal property and all. Then a few years ago mother — Mrs. Isabelle Anderson — was back there and talked the matter over with Mrs. Solmonson then gave to understand that Mrs. Solmonson just considered the money lost as the note was then due and outlawed.
"Here at the time I lost everything, to avoid taking bankruptcy I paid the creditors $100.00 on every $1,000.00 due. And if Mrs. Haug would consider settlement on that basis we might consider it in order to get the matter cleared up."
Exhibit D is dated the same day as Exhibit C, is written to Luella Haug, and confirms the statements made in Exhibit C. Exhibit E is a letter from defendant to Nangle, dated April *Page 1070 
10, 1942, refers to Exhibit C and reiterates the position there taken.
Exhibit F is a letter from defendant to Nangle and states, in part:
"You say it is not fair for us to hold her money. I am not holding her money. The only thing I can do is to treat her as I did my other creditors which is the honest and fair way to do. If I should try to beat anybody it would not be Luella. As a matter of fact I was not the one who borrowed that money of Aunt Tillie's. Mother was back there visiting * * * she [Tillie] asked Mother if she could use $2000. Mother told her she would have to see me about it. So Mother came home and asked me if we needed and I told her `no.' But in a few days we got a draft for $2000 saying to use the money and make out a note at 6%. The only reason that note was not put in for collection — Mother and Aunt Tillie both knew that the money was lost during the depression. * * * what I should like to know — why should I be the goat on this note, which is past 20 years old? And I am informed that your Illinois laws treat any note after 10 years without renewing as null and void. I believe I paid the interest on the note for about 10 or 14 years. * * * Now this is final, as I know where I am at. You figure up all the interest I have paid on the note and the $200 I will pay soon and see what is left of the principal $2000. I do not want to get into a jam like during the last war and depression when I lost $45000 hard earned money and it is rather hard to take. I'd sure like to get 10% of my principal back. * * * I don't figure on paying more than the original $2000 in all. Talk the matter over with Luella and let us know soon what she will do. But this is all I will do."
In January 1943, defendant filed a demurrer to the petition as amended. Paragraphs 1 and 2 asserted the statute of limitations as a defense to the action. Paragraph 3 stated:
"3. That the debt being barred by the Statute of Limitations the letters attached to the plaintiff's petition are insufficient to revive the alleged debt as required by Section 11018 of the 1939 Code of Iowa, in that (a). The said writings or letters do not identify the debt in question. (b). The said letters do *Page 1071 
not acknowledge the said debt as a valid and existing indebtedness. (c). The said letters do not acknowledge or admit that the debt sued upon is unpaid. (d). That the said letters, in fact, deny the validity of the debt and protest payment thereof. (e). That there is no unqualified acknowledgment or admission of the debt or that the same is unpaid. (f). The letters contain no promise either express or implied to pay the said debt at any time."
The demurrer was submitted to the court April 19, 1943. The ruling thereon was not entered until September 1, 1943. The court determined that the statutes, in effect when the demurrer was submitted, should be applied and, if not, that the demurrer should be treated as a motion to dismiss under Rule 111 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. The court found that "all of the letters which are attached to the plaintiff's petition and amendment thereto should be considered as a whole and when so considered I reach the conclusion that the defendant did not in any of the correspondence admit the note in question to be a valid and existing debt but on the contrary denied the validity of the debt and refused payment thereof. The defendant specifically raised the question of the Statutes of Limitation and asserted his rights thereunder. The writing relied upon by the plaintiff is insufficient as an admission to revive the debt which was long barred by the Statutes of Limitation." The court sustained paragraphs 1, 2, 3-b, 3-d, 3-e, 3-f of the demurrer and overruled paragraphs 3-a and 3-c. Plaintiff elected to stand on his petition. Judgment was entered dismissing the action at plaintiff's costs. Plaintiff appeals to this court.
[1] Since the note herein was due by its terms April 17, 1923, it became barred by the statute of limitations (section 11007 (6), Code, 1931) ten years thereafter, or on April 18, 1933. Payments of interest and partial payments on principal or interest thereafter would not revive the debt. Hootman v. Beatty,228 Iowa 591, 293 N.W. 32, and cases cited therein. The decisive question is whether defendant's letters are such an acknowledgment of the debt as to revive it under section 11018, Code, 1939, which provides as follows:
"Causes of action founded on contract are revived by an *Page 1072 
admission in writing, signed by the party to be charged, that the debt is unpaid, or by a like new promise to pay the same."
[2] The statute provides for two methods of revivor (1) an admission in writing, signed by the party to be charged, that the debt is unpaid, or (2) a like new promise to pay the same. It is not necessary that the writing constitute both an admission and a new promise. Either one is sufficient. McClure v. Smeltzer,222 Iowa 732, 734, 269 N.W. 888, and cases cited therein. The letters relied upon contain no promise to pay the note in full, merely an offer to pay ten per cent of the face of same. The plaintiff does not rely upon a new promise to pay the note but contends that the letters constitute a sufficient admission in writing that the debt is unpaid.
The trial court, in overruling paragraph 3-a of the demurrer, in effect held that the letters sufficiently identify the debt. Defendant concedes that such holding is correct. We agree that it is right. Barton v. Boland, 224 Iowa 1215, 279 N.W. 87, and cases cited therein.
In overruling paragraph 3-c of the demurrer the court appears to hold that the letters acknowledge or admit that the debt is unpaid. At first blush, this might seem to be decisive of the case, because the statute merely required that there be "an admission in writing, signed by the party to be charged, that the debt is unpaid." However, taken with the rulings on the balance of paragraph 3 of the demurrer, that is not the effect of the ruling. The subparagraphs that the court sustained assert that the letters do not acknowledge the debt as a valid and existing indebtedness, deny the validity of the debt, protest payment thereof, make no unqualified acknowledgment or admission of the debt or that the same is unpaid, and contain no promise to pay the debt at any time. The court held that these features of the writings prevented them from constituting such an admission that the debt is unpaid as would revive the debt. The court was right in so holding.
The provisions of the statute, section 11018, Code, 1939, have existed without substantial change for more than eighty years. See section 2751, Revision of 1860; section 2539, Code, 1873; section 3456, Code, 1897. Prior to 1860, however, the statute did not require the admission or new promise to be in *Page 1073 
writing, signed by the party to be charged. Section 1670, Code, 1851.
In Penley v. Waterhouse, 3 (Clarke) Iowa 418, 438, decided in 1856, Chief Justice Wright points out that that statute (section 1670, Code, 1851) was declaratory of the common law. The English statutes and decisions are reviewed, and this court announces as follows:
"Hence it may be now said to be well settled, that in order to take a case out of the statute, there must either be an expresspromise, or the acknowledgment of a subsisting debt, from which a promise of payment may be inferred."
In Kleis v. McGrath, 127 Iowa 459, 462, 103 N.W. 371, 69 L.R.A. 260, 109 Am. St. Rep. 396, the pronouncement above quoted is followed. However, in Doran v. Doran, 145 Iowa 122, 126, 123 N.W. 996, 997, 25 L.R.A., N.S., 805, Judge McClain points out that the change made in section 2751, Revision of 1860, and retained in section 2539, Code, 1873, and section 3456, Code, 1897, that the admission or new promise must be in writing signed by the party to be charged thereby, is "a statute differing in terms and evidently in purpose from those statutes" construed in the early cases. We therefore held therein that the admission in writing need not be made to the creditor or one representing him but would be sufficient though made to a stranger, stating at page 128 of 145 Iowa, page 998 of 123 N.W., as follows:
"The conclusion that our statute should be considered simply as providing a form of evidence removing the bar of the statute of limitations rather than as requiring something equivalent to a new promise to pay is sustained in principle by a number of cases in which it is held that the admission or acknowledgment is effectual if established by proper evidence, although made to an entire stranger to the contract sought to be enforced." (Citing cases.)
The foregoing pronouncement was recently adhered to in Leland v. Johnson, 227 Iowa 520, 288 N.W. 595. We have also held that a written admission that the debt is unpaid, which will revive the debt, is contained in an offer to settle a legal *Page 1074 
liability for less than the full amount of the debt, if "the offers to compromise contained therein were not merely offers to pay something to avoid litigation, but were offers to make settlement of an indebtedness which these letters showed was still unpaid." Koht v. Dean, 220 Iowa 86, 93, 261 N.W. 491, 495. See, also, McClure v. Smeltzer, supra, 222 Iowa 732, 739, 269 N.W. 888.
[3] But here we have a debt that is barred by the statute. Defendant's letters recite that fact, state that he relies thereon, and make an offer to pay but ten per cent of the face of the note to buy his peace. His statement in the first letter that the note is "outlawed," and his later statements, "Why should I be the goat on this note, which is past 20 years old?" — "your Illinois laws treat any note after 10 years without renewing as null and void," — "this is final, as I know where I am at," — "this is all I will do," clearly show that he did not intend to do more than that. These statements are easily distinguishable from those considered in Koht v. Dean, supra, and McClure v. Smeltzer, supra, where the writings were not coupled with the claim that the statutory bar was a defense, such as we have here. Surely, these statements cannot constitute an "admission" that will revive an outlawed debt under section 11018 of the Code. If that were so, the statute would become a dangerous trap and susceptible to grave abuse. Cannot one reply to a collection letter and state that, though the debt is unpaid, it is barred by the statute and unenforceable? Would such a letter revive the debt? We hold that it would not. An admission, which the writer qualifies in the next breath by the assertion of the defense of the statute, is not the kind of an "admission" contemplated by the legislature in section 11018.
We are satisfied that the ruling complained of was not erroneous. The judgment is — Affirmed.
HALE, MULRONEY, OLIVER, MANTZ, GARFIELD, and WENNERSTRUM, JJ., concur.
OLIVER, GARFIELD, MANTZ, and MULRONEY, JJ., also specially concur.
SMITH, C.J., and BLISS, J., dissent. *Page 1075