Opinion op the court by
JUDGE SETTLEReversing.
This case is'before us on a second appeal. After the-filing of the record on this appeal, Thomas S. Buchanan, in. whose favor the judgment went in the court below, died intestate, and by order of revivor Percival Moore, administrator of his estate, was substituted as appellee. On February 8, 1888, Buchanan borrowed of the appellant, Louisville Banking Company, $6,700, for which the note in controversy was executed, payable four months after date. On June 1, 1896, this action was instituted upon the note-against Buchanan by appellant, and judgment prayed for the amount thereof, with interest from June 11, 1888. Among other defenses relied- on in the answer was the-plea of the five-years’ statute of limitation, it being averred, therein by Buchanan that the note sued on had been discounted by appellant and thereby placed upon the footing of a foreign bill of exchange, and that, as more than five-years elapsed between ’ the maturity of the note and the institution of the action thereon, the five-years’ statute of limitation barred a recovery.
Upon the trial of the case the lower court rendered judgment sustaining the plea of limitation and dismissing-the action. An appeal was taken from that judgment, and. on November 20,1899, this court held that the note was not on the footing of a bill of exchange, and therefore that the action was not barred -by the five-years’ statute of limitation. Consequently, the judgment of the lower- court was. reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Louisville Banking Company v. Buchanan, 107 Ky., 125, 21 *979R., 756, 52 S. W., 967. After the return of the case to the low•er court, to-wit, December 2, 1899, Buchanan, who during the pendency of the appeal had filed his petition in bankruptcy and obtained a discharge from his debts, filed a supple.mental answer to the appellant’s petition, in which he pleaded and relied on his discharge in bankruptcy in bar of any recovery upon this note. On February 26, 1900, appellant filed a reply to the supplemental answer, in the -second paragraph of which it was averred that his discharge in bankruptcy did not release Buchanan from the payment of the note sued on, as he procured from-appellant the money for which it was given by fraud, and that by the provisions of the bankrupt law, as well as by the terms of the discharge itself, that instrument does not operate as a release from debts created by the fraud of the bankrupt. A demurrer filed by Buchanan to the second paragraph of the reply was overruled, and' he thereupon filed .a rejoinder, in the third paragraph of which limitation was pleaded; it being therein alleged that the fraud complained •of in the reply, if any there was, “was committed more than ten years before the filing of said plaintiff’s reply, . . . and that more than ten years have elapsed since plaintiff discovered said alleged fraud.” A demurrer to this paragraph, and also a motion to strike it out, were filed, but both were overruled, and appellant then filed its surrejoinder, the second paragraph of which controverted the plea of ten-years’ limitation relied on by Buchanan. The third •paragraph set out the former plea of the five-year statute of limitation made by Buchanan, and which this court held •did not apply to the note sued on, and relied upon the decision of this court as an. adjudication of that question, and a bar to the right of Buchanan to rely upon the ten-*980year statute pleaded in the rejoinder. The fourth paragraph recited the facts relating to Buchanan’s discharge-in bankruptcy, and averred that it was not until then that appellant could plead the fraud of Buchanan, which is. relied on only in avoidance of his plea of a discharge in. bankruptcy. By agreement of the parties the case was-submitted to the judge of the lower court upon the issues-of res judicata and limitation raised by the pleadings-, and as- evidence upon these issues the pleadings in the case of the-Louisville Banking Company v. Buchanan and Crowder et ah, were filed and made a part of the record. The court upon the trial,- sustained the plea of limitation and dismissed the petition. Appellant entered motion and grounds for a new trial, but the motion was overruled, and he complains of the judgment, and seeks its reversal.
The only question presented by the record for our consideration is, did Buchanan’s plea of ten years’ limitation, bar a recovery upon the note? It may be remarked that section 17 of the present bankrupt act (Act Cong. July 1,, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 550 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3428]) expressly excepts from the discharge that may be granted a bankrupt debt created by fraud. Indeed, it does not seem, to be denied by counsel for appellee 'that, if the money for which the note was executed by Buchanan was obtained by fraud, his discharge in bankruptcy did not relieve him from liability upon the note. The sole contention on behalf of his administrator is that there can be no recovery by appellant upon the note, because the fraud was committed more than ten years before the reply complaining thereof was filed. Section 2515, of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903 provides: “An action for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake . . . shall be commenced within five-*981years next after the cause of action accrued.” Section 2519, Ky. St. 1903, provides: “In actions for relief for fraud or mistake, or damages for either, the cause of action shall not be deemed to have accrued until the discovery of the fraud or mistake; but no such action shall be brought ten years after the time of making the contract or the perpetration of the fraud.” It is manifest from the language of the statutes, supra, that both refer to actions for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake, In 19 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 153, it is said: “The statutes [of limitation] effect remedies, not defenses. But the word ‘defenses,’ as here used, is limited to matters purely of defense, and does not embrace matters which may be used as the basis of a counterclaim or a cross petition. The rule is further qualified in many of the States by statutory provisions and judicial decisions to the effect that a claim sought to be used as a set-off can not be so pleaded unless it appears that it was not barred when the plaintiff’s action was begun.” We have examined the authorities cited by counsel for appellant, and find that they support the doctrine announced in the above quotation. Among the authorities referred to is the case of Amaker v. New, 33 S. C. 28, 11 S. E. 386, 8 L. R. A. 687, the facts of which appear to be as follows. One Inabnet being financially involved, and unable to pay his debts, in 1866 made a voluntary conveyance by deed of 300 acres of land, all he owned, to his son-in-law, Bennett, in trust for the grantor’s wife for life, with remainder to his children. The land was levied upon and sold in 1868 under nulla bona proceedings at the suit of Sistrunk, a creditor of Inabnet, at which sale Sistrunk became the purchaser, and thereafter got possession of the land. In the meantime Inabnet died, and *982liis widow, by proceedings in and judgment of the probate court, was allotted in 1869 as dower 158% acres of the 300 acres of land. Sistrunk died in 1884, and the 158% acres of land were included in partition proceedings between his heirs, and were sold, subject to the widow’s doer, to Amaker, in 1885. In the following year the widow, Mrs. Inabnet, died, and her daughter, Frances New, thereupon took possession of the dower land. Amaker sued in ejectment to recover the land of Mrs. New, claiming it under his deed from Sistrunk’s heirs. Mrs. New resisted the recovery of the land by Amaker, and relied upon the statute of limitation, which in South Carolina is six years, insisting that Amaker’s grantor, Sistrunk, should have sued to set aside the voluntary conveyance within that time after obtaining his title, and the lower court so adjudged. But upon appeal to the Supreme Court of the State, that tribunal, in an opinion by Judge Mclver, said: “The ‘plea of the statute,’ as it is called (improperly, as I think for such a plea must be directed to the cause of action set forth in the complaint), is not directed to the plaintiff’s cause of action, but is interposed as a protection against an attack made by the plaintiff -upon the defense set up by defendants. The plaintiff having made out a prima facie title, as shown by the refusal' of the motion for a nonsuit, to which no exception was taken,- the defendants undertook to show a superior title in themselves under the deed in question, and surely thé plaintiff was entitled to show any defect in that deed which would render it insufficient to vest title in the defendants, either by showing that it was not under seal, or not executed in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, or that the grantor was non-compos, or that it was not recorded. If so, why may it *983not also be shown that it was void for fraud? I do not understand, that it was ever the rule that a deed or other instrument could not be attacked for fraud after the lapse of the prescribed time, in any way, but only that it could not be attacked by an action instituted for that purpose. I can very well understand how the law, from considerations of public policy, may forbid one from invoking its aid by bringing an action to set aside a deed for fraud after the time limited for the purpose; bufi I am unable to understand upon what principle either of law, equity, or good morals, one who had made out a prima facie case for the relief he demands can be forbidden from showing that the defense set up against his claim is founded in fraud, simply because such fraud has been committed so long ago as to bar an action brought to obtain relief from such fraud; but I do not think any case can be found which could sustain such a doctrine.” In Jackson v. Plyler, 38 S. C. 496, 17 S. E. 255, 37 Am. St. Rep. 782, the same doctrine was upheld, and the case of Amaker v. New, supra, cited and approved, and again adhered to in Goforth v. Goforth, 47 S. C. 126, 25 S. E. 40. In all'these cases the facts were in many respects similar to those of the case at bar.
We also find the courts of last resort of Arkansas, Indiana and California to be in full accord with the Supreme Court of South Carolina upon the question under consideration. Rhea v. Bagley, 66 Ark. 93, 49 S. W. 492; Robinson et al v. Glass, 94 Ind. 211; Hart v. Church, 126 Cal. 471, 58 Pac. 910, 77 Am. St. Rep. 195. In Hart v. Church, supra, it appears that a note and mortgage were executed by Mrs. Hart through the compulsion of her husband, and that she subsequently brought suit to cancel them. By cross action *984Church set up the mortgage, and asked that it be enforced, to which Mrs. Hart answered, pleading the fraud by which the note and mortgage were procured to be executed by her. Church replied, relying on limitation. Upon the issues thus presented the Supreme Court Qf California said: “It is insisted that the complaint itself shows a lack of equity, in that plaintiff’s delay in commencing her action for cancellation is not sufficiently explained; and it is argued that the same omissions which render her complaint defective make her defense to the- cross-complaint upon the ground of fraud itself insufficient. It is true, as appellant contends, that where a party seeks a rescission of a contract he must act with promptness, and that the question as to what is or is not a prompt effort to rescind must depend in each case upon its own peculiar facts. It is also true that where a party seeks relief upon the ground of fraud or mistake the action must be commenced within three years after the- discovery of the facts constituting the fraud or mistake, but a different case is presented where the party who has procured.the fraudulent contract, or who seeks to take advantage of it, asks to have it declared valid, or to enforce its executory terms, and is thus himself asking affirmative relief. The three-years statutfe does not bar the defendant in such a case from objecting to the validity or to the enforcement of the contract upon the grounds of fraud. It is not incumbent upon one who has thus been defrauded to go into court and ask relief, but he may abide his time, and, where enforcement is sought against him, excuse himself from performance by proof of the fraud. Of course, in such a case he incurs the risk of defeat by the intervention of the rights of innocent parties.” While this court has never decided the question *985of limitation here presented upon the precise state of case now before it, it has, in effect, held that it did not apply in a practically similar case. In Avritt v. Russell, 58 S. W. 811, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 752, it appears that on January 4, 1888, Avritt executed to Russell his note for $738.46 in renewal of an older note and due bill which had theretofore been given by the former to the latter upon partial settlements of fees growing out of a former partnership between them in the practice of law. Subsequently a payment of $200 was made by Avritt upon the note of $733.46; some time after which he learned through his brother, Samuel Avritt, who had acted as his agent that Russell had collected a partnership fee of $1,356.70 in the case of one Holt, Avritt’s part of which had been retained by Russell in payment of the $733.46 note. “At the September term, 1895, appellant, Avritt, brought suit against Russell for the surrender of the $733.46 note, alleging concealment by Russell of the fact of the collection of the Holt fee, and that the note was executed by Avritt in ignorance of the fact that he was not indebted to Russell; seeking also a recovery of the amount paid on the note, which was averred to have been paid by his mistake and the fraud of Russell in withholding the true state of the firm’s account from him. A suit was also brought by Sylvester A. Russell, son of Judge Russell, against appellant upon the $733.46 note, it being alleged that it was assigned by W. E. Russell to his wife, Sue E. Russell, and by her to S.' !A. Russell. To this suit a plea óf no consideration was interposed, it being averred that when the partnership was dissolved it was agreed that appellant’s share in all fees thereafter collected from the unfinished business of the firm should be applied to the discharge of the notes and *986the surplus ‘ accounted for to appellant. A plea of the statute of limitation was interposed by appellees, the Russells, upon the theory that relief was sought by appellant against fraud or mistake as to the date of the. collection of the Holt fee.” The plea of limitation made by Russell was to the defense interposed by Avritt that it was procured by fraud. The two suits between the parties — the one brought by Avritt and the other by S. A. Russell — were consolidated and tried together. The issue was whether Avritt owed the note. His defense was that the note had been procured by fraud, to which limitation was pleaded by Russell. As to the plea of the statute of limitation this court said: “The statute of limitation, in our judgment, has no application whatever in this case. It is not sought here to set aside or annul any transaction as of the date of the collection of the Holt fee. Had the new note not been executed, the plea would have been a plea of payment. As a new note was executed the plea relied upon was the plea of no consideration, to which the statute of limitation is equally inapplicable.” In the case at bar the statute of limitation can not, in our opinion, be relied on to defeat a recovery upon the note. In fact, it is not- pleaded against the note, but by Buchanan for relief against his own fraud. The action is not one to obtain relief on- the ground of fraud or mistake, but to recover $6,700, evidenced by a note. The payor’s defense is that judgment can not go against him because he has been relieved of all liability upon the note by reason of his discharge in bankruptcy, which instrument is formally pleaded and filed. In avoidance of the discharge-in bankruptcy, appellant pleads the alleged fraud committed by Buchanan in obtaining the money for which the note was executed and that by reason of such fraud the discharge *987in bankruptcy does not operate as a release to Buchanan; and for the purpose of making hist discharge effective as to the note the latter pleads that the fraud of which complaint is made was committed more than ten years before the presenting of the complaint, and therefore can not, by reason of the statute of limitation, be relied on to exclude the note sued on from the operation of the discharge in bankruptcy. The action not being bottomed on.fraud or mistake, the fraud of Buchanan did not affect the validity of the note sued on, but only the question of whether he was relieved of liability thereon by the discharge in bankruptcy. It was not necessary to allege or prove the fraud in order to recover on thd note. That question was injected into the case to avoid the discharge in bankruptcy, but for which it would not have been mentioned. It seems to us, therefore, that the plea of limitation in this case goes not to the cause of action, but is directed to the defense. r
We have examined the authorities cited in support of the contention of appellee, but do not find that they militate against the conclusions herein reached. They appear to hold that the statute of limitation can be relied on as against any new or additional cause of action that may be set up by way of amendment in a pending action, and time computed up to the introduction of the new matter. But no new cause of action was brought into this case, as already explained. The fraud of Buchanan does not constitute a new cause of action, but is only pleaded as against and in avoidance of the discharge in bankruptcy; hence the rule announced in the cases cited by counsel for appellee is inapplicable. It is, however, insisted for appellee that the case of Treadway v. Pharis, 90 Ky. 664, 12 R. 639, 14 S. *988W. 009, fully sustains the plea of limitation made in this case. We do not think so. It will be found in that case that the action was instituted by the appellant’s children and heirs at law of Pharis by his first wife against his children and heirs at law by his second wife, the latter also being made a defendant, for a' division of his lands fairly, but in such manner as to exclude a tract of 58 acres conveyed to the decedent in 1848 by one Tarleton Embrey, which they prayed be adjudged to belong to them to the exclusion of the decedent’s second wife, and children born to him by her. The ground, as averred in the petition upon which appellants based their exclusive right to the tract of 58 acres, was that “the consideration was paid to Embry out of the estate of their mother, and that, though there was an agreement between her and their father the deed therefor was to be made to her, he fraudulently and without her knowledge or consent procured same to be conveyed to himself.” The plea of the statute of limitation set up by way of defense to the claim of appellants to the sole ownership of the 58.acres was sustained by the lower court and affirmed by this court in an opinion by Judge Lewis for the reason that: “As the ground of relief is the alleged fraud of their father in causing the deed to be made to himself instead of their mother, they had a cause of action, if ever, upon her death, and not having sued within either five or ten years thereafter, they can not now maintain an action to set aside the deed, which has to be done before they can recover the land. While they could not recover the land during the lifetime of their father, there was nothing to prevent institution of an action to set aside the deed, and thereby change- the character of his claim and possession from that of absolute ownership to *989.a tenancy by curtesy.” It will be seen that the case 'Supra, in so far as it was sought to. exclude the last wife and her children, from any interest in the 58 acres of land, was an action for relief upon the ground of fraud, It being distinctly averred in the petition that the fraud of the father caused the title to the land in which the money •of his first wife, plaintiff’s mother, had been invested, to he conveyed to himself without the knowledge or consent of the wife, and in violation of the agreement .that it should be conveyed to her. Therefore the plea of the statute of limitation interposed by the answer went to and .affected the cause of action and the remedy.
We do not think the plea of res judicata interposed by ■the appellant can be sustained. It seems to be based upon the theory that because this court on the. former appeal .held that the five-years statute of limitation relied on :at that time by Buchanan as a bar to a recovery upon the note did not apply, therefore Buchanan could not on any ground whatsoever again plead limitation in this case. •The question of limitation raised and decided on the former appeal was as to the five-year statute relied on to bar the 'note, which it was alleged had been placed on the footing •of a bill of exchange. The question of limitation now raised is a separate and distinct matter, which arose after the ¡filing of Buchanan’s supplemental answer, and because -of appellant’s plea that he had procured the money on the note sued on by fraud, and thereby prevented his discharge in bánkruptcy from releasing him from liability on the note. While for the reasons hereinbefore indicated the •statute of limitation can not be relied on as a defense to the note, or in avoidance of the alleged fraud whereby the money was obtained thereon by Buchanan, the question *990is, in our opinion, unaffected by tbe decision of this court ■ on the former appeal.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for further' proceedings consistent with the opinion herein.