delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was commenced January 7, 1904. The Statute of ¡Limitations had then run on the open account as it originally stood; but the defendant, prior to the time of the trial, did not deny his liability to pay this account, nor state that it was due and owing from the association; on the contrary, January 12, 1899, within the five years limited by the statute, when presented with a statement of the open account and of the note, he replies: “Kindly hear with me until the coming spring and I will commence paying my indebted" ness thereafter,” thus admitting the existence of the entire debt and his personal liability therefor, and his intention to begin its liquidation within the period of the next three months. The bill he was then asked to pay was made up of the note and of the open account, and his unlimited offer to pay his indebtedness logically includes both accounts. Where there is an acknowledgment of an indebtedness, it will be taken to relate to the entire demand, and the burden is on the* party so acknowledging to show that it related to a part only of the debt demanded. Morrell v. Ferrier, 7 Colo. 22, and cases cited. The rule is that any language of the debtor clearly admitting the debt to be due and unpaid, and showing an intention to pay it, will be considered an implied promise to pay and will take the case out of the statute. Whiteman v. McFarland, 68 Ill. App., 295, and cases cited. A slight acknowledgment of a debt is sufficient to take the case out of the statute, if made before the statute has run. Deloach v. Turner, 7 Rich. L. (S. C.), 150. In the authorities cited by the defendant on this point the acknowledgment was made after the statute had run against the demand.
From its inception this indebtedness was that of the defendant. Even if the association had been regularly incorporated and a going concern, the defendant was not one of its officers, and as his counsel admits, had “no power to loose or bind that association,” and would, therefore, bind himself only by ordering advertisements in its name. If the association was a name only, a fact- which is clearly shown by the evidence, under which name the defendant did business, he is bound for and" liable to pay all the bills thus contracted. In the deed of trust hereinbefore mentioned the defendant stipulated that he would pay all the expenses of the association, and to that end reserved to himself twenty per cent of all money paid into the association.
It is in evidence that the plaintiff was publishing advert tisements on the order and on the credit of the defendant prior to- January 1, 1898; that on or about that date the defendant asked that this account, for his own convenience, be run in the future in the name of the association, admitting at the same time that he and not it owned the lands to be advertised; and that while the plaintiff agreed so to run the account, the credit was given to the defendant and not to the association. All of the open account originated under these conditions after this change was made. These circumstances make the undertaking of the defendant an original one. Lusk v. Throop, 189 Ill. 131.
It is true that when a case is tried by the court the same force and effect should be given to his findings upon questions of fact as are given to the verdict of a jury. Kaestner v. Oldham, 102 Ill. App. 373. It is also true that when in such trial, at the close of the plaintiff’s case, the court, at the request of the defendant, decides against the plaintiff in whole or in part, he does so under the same limitations and restrictions which bind him when a motion is made to instruct 'the jury to find a verdict for the defendant. In the latter case the motion must be denied if there be any evidence, not considering testimony to the contrary, which fairly tends to establish a cause of action. First N. Bk. v. Northwestern Bk., 152 Ill. 301.
The reason why the defendant contests this open account may be that which is indirectly referred to by his counsel when he states: “One may deal at one time in a certain way, and at another time in an entirely different way. These transactions depend on circumstances. Heeds must,’ says the proverb, ‘when the Devil drives.’ ”
For the reasons given the judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and judgment will be entered here for the principal of the note for $110, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from October li, 1897, and also for the face of the open account, namely $464, with interest thereon at the rate of five per cent per annum from «Tanuary 12, 1899; the interest in each case to be computed up to the date of the entry of judgment herein.
Reversed and judgment here.