Opinion
December 1, 1911.
Warren McConihe, for the appellant.
Thomas W. Churchill, for the respondent.
The plaintiff, the assignee of the executors of one John Rycroft, deceased, sues to recover the amount of several alleged loans, made by the said testator to the defendant between May 11, 1900, and October 3, 1900, aggregating two hundred and five pounds with interest. The defendant was the daughter-in-law of the said John Rycroft, and the several sums in question were advanced in amounts varying from five to sixty pounds to defray the expenses of the defendant and her daughter who were then traveling in Europe. The letters written to the defendant by her father-in-law tend to indicate that he intended either to give said amounts to her or to debit them to her husband. The defendant, however, gave back receipts in each case, in which she promised to repay the sum advanced "at some future time," and the subsequent correspondence between the parties shows that both treated the advances as loans to the defendant. The action was begun by the voluntary appearance of the defendant on November 19, 1907. The defendant pleaded the Statute of Limitations. To avoid that plea the plaintiff relies upon a subsequent written acknowledgment and promise to pay. On the 10th of March, 1902, the defendant wrote to her father-in-law, and, in the course of the letter, said: "You can rest assured of one thing, when the estate is settled I will pay you at once what I personally owe you; * * * was not the least surprised at your dunning letter, notwithstanding I have told you many times I would pay you when my father's estate was settled;" and on July 2, 1903, she wrote another letter, in the course of which she said: "What you advanced to me personally I have always told you that I intended to pay you just as soon as my father's estate is settled, which will be very soon."
Assuming, without deciding, that those statements constituted a sufficient acknowledgment of the debt, the promise to pay was conditional, and it is well settled that, where a conditional promise is relied upon, performance of the condition must be shown, whether the promise be made before or after the statute has run. ( Dean v. Hewit, 5 Wend. 257; Tompkins v. Brown, 1 Den. 247; Shoemaker v. Benedict, 11 N.Y. 176; Brooklyn Bank v. Barnaby, 197 id. 210.) The plaintiff rested without attempting to prove that the father's estate had been settled, whereupon the learned trial court correctly ruled that it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove the happening of the condition and dismissed the complaint. The plaintiff was then allowed to reopen the case and to call the defendant as a witness to prove the happening of the condition. She testified that her father died May 19, 1900; that his estate had not been and could not be settled, as she understood it, until the death of her brother; that she had received from the executors some amount between $1,000 and $2,000; that when she made the conditional promise relied upon she had in mind the settlement of the estate upon the death of her brother, who was suffering from a chronic malady, as her father-in-law knew. It did not appear, and no attempt was made to show, under what circumstances the father's executors had advanced money to the defendant, and no attempt was made to show that there had ever been any accounting by them or judicial settlement of their accounts. However, at the close of the entire evidence, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, evidently upon the theory that the happening of the condition was shown by proof that the defendant had received a sufficient sum from her father's estate to pay the claim in suit, though she testified that the entire amount received by her was used in the payment of other debts of her deceased husband.
So far as the defendant is concerned, her father's estate will not be settled until there is either a judicial settlement and a decree for distribution and the payment to her of her share, or at least until the executors, without a judicial settlement, pay her the share of the estate bequeathed to her by her father. There is nothing in this record to show the amount of the estate or the amount bequeathed to the defendant. As commonly understood, the word "settlement" involves a finality. To "settle" a debt means to discharge it. Part payment does not amount to a settlement unless the debt is discharged. The defendant did not say that she would pay as soon as she received a sufficient sum from her father's estate, and, therefore, the mere proof that she had received enough to pay the amount sued for did not satisfy the condition. Doubtless, the statute does not commence to run against the new promise until the happening of the condition, but the plaintiff cannot rely upon the promise to avoid the plea of the statute in a suit on the original indebtedness without proving the happening of the condition, i.e., that as to the defendant, her father's estate has been settled by the payment to her of her distributive share or of the amount bequeathed to her.
The judgment and order should be reversed, and a new trial granted with costs to appellant to abide the event.
INGRAHAM, P.J., CLARKE, SCOTT and DOWLING, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.