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Wagstaff v. Smith

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1845
39 N.C. 1 (N.C. 1845)

Summary

In Wagstaff v. Smith, 39 N.C. 1, it was held that a tenant in common, in possession and sole enjoyment of the common property was protected by the statute of limitations from accounting with his co-tenants, for rents and profits received more than three years prior to the bringing of the action; and that interest should be allowed against him, only from the time of actual demand made, or suit instituted.

Summary of this case from Jolly v. Bryan

Opinion

(December Term, 1845.)

1. A tenant in common in possession is protected by the statute of limitations from an account to his co-tenant of the rents and profits received more than three years before the commencement of a suit.

2. Interest shall only be allowed from the time of an actual demand or from the commencement of the suit, if no previous demand has been made.

This was a petition to rehear a decree made in this Court between the same parties, at December Term, 1832, 17 N.C. 264. The bill was for an account of the issues and profits of land, of which the plaintiff and defendant were tenants in common, the defendant having had the actual occupation. The defense was the statute of limitations. The bill was filed in GRANVILLE Court of Equity in February, 1829, and a partition had been made of the land held in common in November, 1826.

Nash and Devereux for the plaintiff. (2)

Badger for the defendant.



This case has been reheard upon the petition of the defendant, and the Court is of opinion that there is error in the decretal order in this, that it declared the plaintiff entitled to an account of rents and profits for more than three years before the filing of his bill. A legal demand, prosecuted in a court of equity, is barred by the same length of time, as constitutes a statutory bar at law. Upon legal titles and legal demands, a court of equity is bound by the statute of limitations. The claim in this case is one purely legal. The plaintiff demands an account from the defendant, with whom he had been tenant in common of a tract of land, of the plaintiff's share of rents and profits of the common property, the whole of which were retained by the defendant to his sole use. At common law, a tenant in common, unless where he had made his companion bailiff, could not have an action of account, but by the statute 4 Anne, Ch. 16, it was enacted that an action of account may be maintained by one tenant in common against the other, as bailiff, for receiving more than his share. It was doubted by the plaintiff's counsel, in the argument, whether this statute was in force here — but we see no foundation for that doubt. It is avowedly an "act for the amendment of the law and the better advancement of justice," and one of those statutes for the amendment of the law repeatedly recognized as in force by our Colonial Legislature, and so declared in the Act of 1777, the court law. It is by this statute, that at this day payment is a good plea to an action of debt on a single bill, or in debt, or a scire facias on a judgment; and that payment of principal and interest due, after the day of payment, may be pleaded to debt on bond with a condition of defeasance.

The bill being then a mere substitute for the action of account, whatever time would be the bar at law, bars the (3) account here. Our act of limitations declares, that all actions of account rendered shall be brought within three years next after the cause of such action or suit, and not after, except such accounts as concern the trade of merchandise between merchant and merchant, and their factors or servants. This demand is not within the exception, but is within the enactment, and the inquiry is, when did the cause of action arise. It has been argued that the cause of action did not arise until after the relation of tenants in common had ceased between the parties, or until after a demand and refusal to account; for that, during all that time, there was no withholding by one, of what the other was entitled to receive. We believe that this is a mistake. The receipt of the entire profits by one tenant in common, as such, is indeed no ouster of his companion — it affects not the possession of the land — but it imposes on him, who receives, an immediate accountability to the other, for the part of the profits to which he is entitled. The enactment of the statute, that "actions of account may be maintained by one joint tenant or tenant in common, his executors and administrators against the others, as bailiff, for receiving more than his share, and against the executors and administrators of such," is decisive, that the action lies while the relation of a common holding continues, and consequently that the cause of action may arise before the severance of that connection. It is sufficient in a declaration, after setting forth the holding as tenants in common, and the receipt of the whole rents, issues and profits, by the defendant, and the obligation of the defendant to render an account to the plaintiff of his share thereof, to aver as a breach that such account had not been rendered, although the defendant "had been often required so to do." See Declaration in 3 Wilson, 73, 74. Now it is a settled principle in pleading, that, where the cause of action does not arise until after a demand made, a special demand must be stated, and the general allegations of "saepius requisitus," or often required, will not answer. The (4) approved from of pleading the statute of limitations in this action is, that the defendant did not receive the profits "at any time within six years (with us three years) before the suing out of the original writ by the plaintiff," which could not be good unless such receipt did impose an immediate accountability. The many decisions in equity, where, professing to act in analogy to the statute, the courts refuse to carry an account of rents and profits further back than to six years before the filing of the bill, are strong indications that the action of account rendered could not be sustained for rents antecedently received. The exception in the statute, of accounts between merchant and merchant, would have been necessary, if, in all cases of confidential dealings, the statute did not commence until the connection had ceased, or a demand of account refused. All the evils intended to be remedied by the enactment — such as the loss of vouchers or other proofs in discharge — would be left in full operation, if time had no effect to cure them. Where one of two tenants in common takes the whole of the annual issues to himself, we hold that his companion has, thereupon, a right to an account for his share — and that the statute of limitations will bar the assertion of this right, unless it be made within the time declared by the statute.

It is, however, further insisted on the part of the plaintiff, that he had a right to the entire account demanded, because the defendant had, within three years before the filing of this bill, promised and undertaken to render such an account. We have met with no authority to show, and on principle we are not disposed to believe, that a promise will take any action out of the operation of the statute of limitations, but an action founded on promises — the action of assumpsit. See A'Court v. Cross, 11 E. C. L., 124; Governor v. Hanrahan, 11 N.C. 44; Morrison v. Morrison, 14 N.C. 402. If the assertion of the present claim had been postponed in consequence of an agreement founded upon that promise, so as to make out a case of fraud, and thereby raise for the plaintiff an equity to the (5) account, to which, but for the success of the fraud, he would have asserted his legal title, then the part of the decretal order complained of might be unobjectionable. But we deem it unnecessary to inquire very particularly into the effect of such a promise, because none such is proved in this case. To the allegations in the bill of a promise and of the facts from which it could be inferred, the defendant has returned an explicit, full and positive denial on his oath. The only witness, whose testimony may be said to conflict with this denial, is David J. Young. He states, that at the time of the division in December, 1826, he, as the agent of the plaintiff, proposed to the defendant to leave all matters in dispute between them to reference, and that, among other things, the balance of rents of the plaintiff's share in the land was expressly stated, that the defendant agreed to the proposal and "mentioned something of the terms," that the witness, as agent of the plaintiff, understood such an agreement to be made, and believes that the defendant so understood it; soon afterwards, the witness called on the defendant for the purpose of entering into bonds and choosing arbitrators, when the defendant said he would not leave it to arbitration; that the improvements, which he had made, were more than equal to the rents, and that he would not give up the land to the plaintiff. Three other witnesses present on the same occasion have been examined, one of whom (Ellickson) represents that there was a long debate, which we understand as meaning an angry controversy, between the defendant and Young, and that he thinks the conclusion was to leave the matters in controversy (but does not state what these were) to arbitration. The other two Jones and Amis, express their belief that no agreement took place, and say that they understood the proposition of Mr. Young not to extend to the rents, but only to the land claimed for the plaintiff. We do not hold ourselves justified upon (6) this testimony, in opposition to the defendant's answer, to pronounce that any agreement to refer was made, much less than there was a well understood agreement to refer the question of rents, and still less an agreement to leave to the arbitrators the mere question of the amount due, thereby distinctly admitting an existing liability, and amounting to a promise to account for the excess received.

The exceptions filed by the defendant to the commissioner's report, have also been heard and argued. The two first exceptions are in substance a repetition of the objection taken to the decretal order upon the rehearing, and for the reasons above stated are sustained and allowed. The last exception objects to interest upon the rents. This is sustained as to the interest accrued before the filing of the bill, and overruled as to that accrued since. We are governed in this by analogy to the rule, which prevails at law on a promise to pay money on demand. A previous request is not necessary to the bringing of the action, but interest will not be allowed for detention of the money, until after a demand or suit instituted.

The account which has been taken is to be reformed pursuantly to this opinion, and the complainant is to have a decree for the balance with costs.

PER CURIAM. DECREED ACCORDINGLY.

Overruled: Northcott v. Casper, 41 N.C. 307, 313; Gaskell v. King, 34 N.C. 222; Jolly v. Bryan, 86 N.C. 459.

(7)


Summaries of

Wagstaff v. Smith

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1845
39 N.C. 1 (N.C. 1845)

In Wagstaff v. Smith, 39 N.C. 1, it was held that a tenant in common, in possession and sole enjoyment of the common property was protected by the statute of limitations from accounting with his co-tenants, for rents and profits received more than three years prior to the bringing of the action; and that interest should be allowed against him, only from the time of actual demand made, or suit instituted.

Summary of this case from Jolly v. Bryan
Case details for

Wagstaff v. Smith

Case Details

Full title:JOHN WAGSTAFF v. CHARLES SMITH

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1845

Citations

39 N.C. 1 (N.C. 1845)

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