The opinion of the Court was delivered at the ensuing term in Penobscot, by
Parris J.The statute having been pleaded in bar' it is incumbent on the plaintiff to remove the bar. He contends that his case comes within the class of cases provided for in the 11th section of our limitation act. If so, and lie has shown that the first writ failed of a sufficient service by unavoidable accident he is entitled to judgment. We will first consider the proof of accident. If the plaintiff relies upon accident arising from irregularity or miscarriage of the mail, he must shew that his letter was put into the post office sufficiently early to reach the officer to whom it was directed in season for service by due course of that mail by which he sends. Through some parts of the county of Lincoln, the mail passes every day. It does so through Bath, where the defendant resides, and through other towns which are as near his residence as Dresden. If, from any consideration, the plaintiff saw fit to send his writ for service to an officer in Dresden or any other town in the county, even the most remote, he had a perfect right to do so, and is not to be prejudiced thereby, provided he sent it in such season as that by the due and usual course of the mail to that town the precept would reach the officer sufficiently early for legal service. This he must show as a necessary link in the chain of evidence to prove the accident; for if the letter was not seasonably put into the *451office, then its non-arrival cannot, by the party sending it, be attributed to unavoidable accident.
From the exceptions it appears that the letter was post marked Oct. 14, which was Wednesday. Whether it left Norridgewock on that day, or was then received at the office and sent by the next mail, does not appear ; probably it was sent on that day. The time of service for the court to which the writ was returnable expired on the next Tuesday. To establish the fact then that it was seasonably deposited in the office he must show that a letter put in at Norridgewock on Wednesday, as this was, would, by due course of the mail, arrive at Dresden sufficiently early to enable an officer, after receiving it there, to make service of a precept in Bath, before the expiration 'of the Tuesday next ensuing; for unless that fact be proved, the legal inference from what does appear in the case is, that the delay in receiving the letter is attributable to the omission of the plaintiff or his attorney to put it seasonably into the post office, rather than to any accident growing out of the irregularity or failure of the mail.
This presumption arises from the want of proof, on the part of the plaintiff to show how the fact was, and which, easily obtainable as it was, he would not probably have neglected to procure, if such proof would have made in his favor. The exceptions do not show that this fact was established either directly or by any inference that can be drawn from the testimony. On the contrary if the mail arrived at Dresden on Wednesday in each week it is certain, or if on Tuesday it is probable, that the letter containing this writ could not have reached there in season for service. On what day it did regularly arrive does not appear by the exceptions. As the exceptions purport to give all the evidence in the case, and as upon the point under consideration there was no conflicting testimony, we are called upon to decide as a question of law, whether the proof offered by the plaintiff, standing uncontradicted, as it does, supports the allegation of unavoidable accident ; and we have no hesitation in saying that it does not. The writ ¡nay have failed of service from that cause, or, what is moro probable from the facts proved, the failure is attributable to the plaintiff’s neglect. He has not shown *452the former, and the law requires him to do it even before the defendant is to be called upon to support his defence.
The statute protects the sheriff, generally, from all actions for the misconduct and negligence of his deputies, unless commenced and sued within four years next after the cause of action, and that protection must avail the defendant in this case, unless the plaintiff can avoid it by establishing the facte alleged in his replication, and by showing that his case comes within the exception. It is not sufficient that he merely allege the facts. On him rests the burthen of proving them. He asserts that the first writ was made on the 4th of Sept. If so, it remained in his hands, or his attorney’s from that time to the fourteenth of October, a period of nearly six weeks, and until less than one week previous to the expiration of the time of service for the court to which it was returnable. It was then sent to an officer residing in a town where the mail arrives but once a week : and without showing that by due course of mail it could have possibly reached the officer in season for service, and when, from his own testimony, it is apparent that he might not, he calls upon the jury to say that it failed of service by unavoidable accident. Such a procedure cannot comport with either the letter or spirit of the statute. If the mail performed its usual course, and the letter was conveyed without miscarriage, but did not reach Dresden in season for service, how can the failure be attributable to accident, or how can the plaintiff’s well founded expectations of its arrival have any bearing upon the question of accident?
It was incumbent on him to ascertain the course of the mail, and at his peril to send his writ in such time as that, without miscarriage, it would arrive in season. But further, the four years expired on the second of October, and yet, according to the plaintiff’s statement, notwithstanding the writ had then been made four weeks, he continues to keep it in his .possession nearly two weeks longer before he transmits it to the officer. If he had shown that there was then time for it seasonably to reach the officer by the conveyance which the plaintiff selected, he would not be chargable on account of the previous delay. But, inasmuch, as he neither does or attempt? to show this, the presumption is that it failed by reason *453of not having been seasonably put into the post office ; and without any evidence to rebut that presumption, and there vas none, the defendant might well ask that the jury should be instructed that there was no evidence of unavoidable accident by which the first writ failed of service.
But if the facts alleged in the plaintiff’s replication had been abundantly proved, we are of opinion that they do not avoid the plea. By recurring to the statutes of Massachusetts, it will be perceived that our general statute of limitations is made up of several statutes of the Commonwealth, passed at different times, and applicable to different kinds of suits. The Sth and 11th sections of our statute are copied verbatim, or nearly so, from the Massachusetts statute of 1794, which relates solely to actions of the ease or of debt grounded upon any lending or contract declared in within the term of six years next after the cause of action accrued. This statute was limited in its application to actions arising ex contractee, and the first section provides what shall be deemed the commencement of such an action. By other statutes the limitation was so extended as to embrace personal actions of almost every description, limiting their commencement, to different periods after the cause of action arose, but omitting the declaratory provision, as to what should constitute the commencement of an action, contained in the first section.
Upon a revision of the statutes by our Legislature, section 7th is made to include all or nearly all actions of a personal nature, including those arising ex delicto as well as ex contractee; and the provision that the actions “ shall bo commenced and sued within the time and limitation expressed,” applies to all actions whether of tort or contract. Then follows the 8th section, which provides what shall be deemed and taken to be the commencement and suing of an action of the case or of debt grounded upon any lending or contract, viz. declaring in a proper writ, returnable according to law, purchased therefore within the term of six years next after the cause of action accrued; and the 11th section, which contains the saving clause on which the plaintiff relies, provides that any action which shall be actually declared in as aforesaid (that is, in a proper *454writ, returnable according to law, purchased therefor within the term of six years next after the cause of action accrued,) and in which the writ purchased therefor shall fail of a sufficient service or return by any unavoidable accident, &c.' then, and in any such case, the plaintiff or plaintiffs or his or her executor or administrator, may commence another action upon the same demand, and shall thereby save the limitation thereof.
As the 11th section is wholly silent as "to the limitation within which the first action shall have been commenced, it is necessary to refer to other parts of the statute to ascertain to what the phraseology “ any action, which shall be actually declared in as aforesaid” applies; and we find nothing to which it can refer, except the 8th section, the declaring in the action not being mentioned or referred to in any other section.
If the 11th section refers only to the class of cases embraced in the 8th, it is manifest that it cannot include the case before us, as such actions are by the 16th section to be commenced and sued within four years, while the 8th section embraces only such cases as are to be commenced and sued within six years. This distinct tion seems not to have been noticed at the trial, and would be fatal to the plaintiff’s action, however strong might be his proof.
What consideration influenced our Legislature to keep up the distinction which seems to have been adopted in Massachusetts in favor of the class of actions included in the 8th section of our statute, it is not material for us to inquire. It has been judicially settled in that State in Cook v. Darling, cited in the argument, that the distinction exists under their statute, the language of which, the court say, is too clear to be misunderstood. The language of our statute is equally clear, being nearly similar and must have the same construction.
The exceptions are sustained, and a new trial is ordered at the bar of this court.