Court Opinion

ID: 6122632
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 20:07:51.157033+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:23:53.446225
License: Public Domain

Barnard, P. J.:
The sole question presented upon this appeal is the legal effect of a receipt given by defendant to plaintiff, in 1872. In 1851 or 1852, the plaintiff, at that time unmarried, lent to her sister’s husband, the defendant, the sum of $1,800. Payment was made on account of interest and principal between 1852 and 1861, when the balance unpaid was $1,600. Two hundred dollars was paid by defendant to plaintiff on account of this $1,600 in January, 1866. In August, 1872, the defendant gave plaintiff this paper:
“Received, January, eighteen hundred and sixty-one (1861), from Mrs. J. R. Kincaid, the sum of sixteen hundred dollars ($1,600), for which I agree to pay interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum from this date. Paid January, 1866, to Mrs. Kincaid on the above, two hundred dollars ($200).
“ WILLIAM ARCHIBALD,
“ Yonkers.”
The question is whether this paper is sufficient to revive the debt which was barred by the statute of limitations in August, 1872. The defendant claims that the paper not being dated, the promise to pay is, in legal effect, as if made in January, 1861. That there i's no promise to pay the principal and that thereby there was no revival of the principal debt. I think the objection not well taken. *11The paper must speak as of the time of its execution and delivery. When the date is omitted, or even wrongfully inserted, parol evidence may be given and fix the time of date. (Draper v. Snow, 20 N. Y., 331.) On the 2d of August, 1812, the defendant acknowledged that he had received $1,600 of plaintiff for which he agreed to pay interest “ from this date,” clearly from the date of the loan just stated; he also, in this paper, acknowledged that he had paid on the loan $200 in January, 1866.
No express promise to pay the principal was needed. An explicit statement that a loan was unpaid and that a present indebtedness existed, was sufficient to revive a debt before the Code. Giving a note for interest due was held a sufficient acknowledgment of the debt to take it out of the statute. (Wenman v. Mohawk Ins. Co., 13 Wend., 261.) The Code (sec. 110) simply requires the acknowledgment or promise “ to be in writing.” This section was designed to introduce no new principle applicable to reviving stale demands, but solely to prevent the revival of such demands by loose oral declarations. The paper in question admits the original loan; agrees to pay interest; recites a payment of a portion of the claim some five years after its creation. I think it sufficient to revive the claim with the interest on it from the date of the advancement of the money.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
GilbeRt and DtemaN, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.