Court Opinion

ID: 6501221
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:14:12.094971+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:36.974014
License: Public Domain

ORMOND, J.
— There are two statutes of limitations applying to parol contracts. The first declares that all actions of account and upon the case except actions for slander and except also such actions as concern the trade of merchandize, between merchant and merchant, their factors and agents, shall be commenced within six years next after the cause of action shall have accrued and not after. (Aik. Dig. 270.)
A subsequent act provides that, “ no action shall be brought to recover any money due by open account, after the expiration of three years, from the accruing of the cause of action.” There is the same proviso in favor of merchants. (Aik. Dig. 272.)
The question to be settled is, what is the meaning of the term “ open account ?” as employed in the act just cited.
The Court below charged, and the defendant’s counsel now *64insist that the true test is, whether the account consists of one item or many, if the former, it is not an open account, if the latter, it is. It is, however, obvious that if all the terms of the contract were not stipulated, the account must be considered as open, and this must be the case whether the account consist of one or more hems. The definition is, therefore, too narrow, as it would not include cases obviously within the grasp of the statute.
In the case of Maury’s administrator vs. Mason’s administrator. (S Porter, 230.) This Court in considering this question held this language : — It may be assumed that, in all cases where the contract is expressed and the duties of each are defined at the time, that it is not an open account. A contract may be made for the sale of goods or to build a house, or to perform any other duty, and although it may never be reduced to writing, it will not, for that omission, become an open account. There is certainly nothing in the statute from which we can arrive at the conclusion that, all accounts must be considered as open, which are not stated or reduced to writing. A contract is certainly neither the one or the other, if all its terms are fixed and certain.”
From this authority it appears that, a contract not reduced to writing, not stated, and consisting of more items than one, is not necessarily an “ open account within the meaning of the statute, and would not be such if all the terms of the contract were agreed on. So on the other hand if consisting but of one item, and any term of the contract remained open for adjustment it would be an open account within the meaning of the statute.”
For example, if a number of articles be sold and delivered at the same time, and the price, amount, and time of payment agreed on, this would not be an open account, because all the terms of the contract are agreed on and settled. On the other hand, if a single article be sold and delivered, and the price or time of payment be left in uncertainty — this is an open account, because there is a term of the contract to be ascertained — •the account is, therefore, unliquidated, it is open.
To apply these principles to this case, there was a sale and delivery of five wagon loads of corn at one and the same time, *65but it is not stated that the price was agreed on, and we cannot infer that such was the fact, against the silence of the bill of exceptions on this point, especially as the charge of the Court is directed to the precise case stated in the bill of exceptions, that the account consisted of but one item. It is true that as to the time of payment, if the parties were silent, the law would infer that it was payable presently, on the delivery of the article sold.
But the price was one of the most important terms of the contract, that does not appear to have been agreed on, and the contract must, therefore, be deemed an open account within the meaning of the statute.
For the error in the charge of the Court, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.