The opinion of the court was delivered by
Huston, J.— This case arose out of the events which occurred -about the -time the stock of the United States Bank was taken, and out of the measures adopted by the directors of that bank soon after it went into operation.
The defendant was one of the commissioners appointed to receive subscriptions. The books were opened in July, 1816, at different places in the several states, and continued open for a certain period. Time was given to inform the board of commissioners how much of the stock was taken. It appeared, that an amount near to three millions of dollars was still unsold, and the books were again opened on the 26th of August. After one or more persons had taken some shares, the defendant subscribed for all that remained, and paid the specie, and gave powers of attorney to transfer the stock due on such his subscription. Very soon after, the plaintiffs appeared, and expressed some disappointment at not having an opportunity to subscribe. The defendant agreed to transfer-to them the number of shares which they wished, about two thousand eight hundred and twenty-five, and they paid him the sum in money which he had just paid, and transferred to him the amount of stock due, and which he had agreed to transfer to the bank. Others were in the same situation, or nearly the same, as the plaintiffs, with regard to other shares obtained from the defendant about .the same time; and more than one suit has been tried between such persons and the defendant; and these suits have not all eventuated in the same way. Part of the subscription was in funded debt of the United States. The bank not being organized at the time of the subscription, this stock was not transferred at that time, but remained in the name of him who owned it; but powers of attorney were.given to transfer it so soon as the bank was organized. About the 1st of November, the directors met. In the mean time, on the 1st of October, one quarter’s interest fell due on the funded debt, and was received by the defendant on all the stock which he was to transfer to the bank on his subscription, and also on that which the plaintiffs had transferred to him. On the 5th of November, the directors resolved, that the subscribers should be required to pay to the bank the interest on the stock subscribed, which had fallen due after the subscription. On the 7th of November, a resolution was brought in and adopted, to reconsider the resolution of the 5th. Several other resolutions on this subject were before the board, and on the 7th of January, 1817, the bank gave up its claim to the *314disputed interest, and directed the cashier to return it to such of th& stock-holders as had paid it to the bank.
Mr. M‘Euen, as well as the defendant, was a director of the; bank at that time, and of course, had notice of, and took a part in these proceedings.
The, plaintiffs contended, the true spirit and meaning of their eon* tract was, that they were to have the two thousand eight hundred aqd twenty-five shares from the defendant upon precisely the same terms as. if they had subscribed for those shares to the bank, from which they would have got the interest on the stock part of the subscription on the 1st of October, and that he having received it, was indebted to them for so much money had. and received to, their use. The defendant denied their construction of the agreement, and $aid, that he sold them so- many shares of bank stock, and received the cash and transfer of funded debt in payment, and was absolutely entitled to that funded debt and its interest; and he also pleaded, and relied on the statute of limitations. The question, whether the bank was entitled to that interest, was one of considerable imports anee in th,e autumn of 18-16, and has been very ably discussed here. The judge who tried the cause thought, and this court think, the defendant is protected by the lapse of time. This independently of' that question.
The claim of the bank, if valid, must have been pursued in six-years, or would have been barred. They asserted this claim for a part of those six years, and then either abandoned it, or transferred it, so far as relates to this subscription to, the plaitotiffs..
If the claim of the bank was valid, and they abando-qed it, that left the money where it was, viz. with the defendant, aqd gave the. plaintiffs no right to it.
If the acts of the bank are considered as transferring their right to the plaintiffs, then they transferred it as they held it, viz. a right vested on the 1st pf October, or at most, on the 5th of November, and barred if not sued within six years from that time. This suit was not brought until after the lapse of more than six years from the 5th of November, 1816. It was brought on the 22d of Geé&Per? 1822. The length of time requisite to bar a claim, is not increased by transferring the debt; all the successive owners have only the six years which would have been allowed to the original claimant. This part of the cause has been very ingeniously argued. It has been said, that while the bank claimed it, M‘Enen and Co. could not sue for it: That while the hank claimed, Girard held'it for-them; and the implied promise to repay it,.did not arise until their claim was at an end.- Perhaps the true way to state the matter is this: If the bank had no right to it,- the plaintiffs might have sued for it and recovered it, notwithstanding the claim of the bank. If they had a right, then the plaintiffs sue on their right transferred, $nd are barred, exactly when the bank would have been.
Qq the 7th of November, Mr. M‘Euen knew of this claim. AI-. *315"though he might not be certain whether the claim was available, that did not prevent the statute from running. It affects a doubtful •claim as much as an unquestionable demand.
It was said, “ I send money by A. to pay my debt to B., and B. accepts less than the sum sent; then, and not till then, the law implies a promise by A. to return me the money.” Perhaps the moment I give the money to A., the law implies a promise, that hé will return to me so much as he does not give to B. 1 do not speak of a case where A. fraudulently induces a belief in me, that he has paid all the money to B-.
Statutes of limitation appear to me to admit of less latitude of construction than any other kind of law. Generally, where a monejf transaction has been totally unattended to for six years, it is because both parties know it to have been in some way settled; and know that this can be satisfactorily proved. Death of witnesses, or of one of the parties, who knows what witnesses to call, would often enable a party to recover it a second time. To prevent this, the law establishes a period, after which it shall not be inquired into. Men may differ in thinking that period too short or too long. The law settles all dispute. A day less than six years and there is no bar; a day after, and the claim is gone.
Under the name of trusts, many cases were at one time taken out of the statute. To effect this, it is now settled, it must be such a trust as is only cognizable in chancery, where such a court exists; and that claims, which in all countries are the daily and proper subjects of a suit at law, are always subject to the operation of this statute. The fraud, to take a case out of the statute, must be an actual imposition, a real deception practised. The mere omission to pay, will not have that effect; if it had, the law is a dead letter.
Motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on the verdict.