A rehearing was granted in this case upon the motion to dismiss ; and, it appearing by the record that the plaintiff’s attorneys accepted service of the petition of appeal on tho twenty-third April, 1SG3, a fact which escaped our attention in our first examination, the motion to dismiss must he overruled and the cause decided on its merits.
The appeal is taken from a judgment by which these promissory notes, made by James G. Gordon and held by plaintiff, were ranked as acknowledged debts of the succession,' and ordered to be paid in the due course of administration.
The plea of prescription of five years is filed in this court by George W. Sargent, dative testamentary executor, the appellant.
The notes matured as follows, respectively : June 24, 1854, December 15, 1854, and January 4, 1855. In tho early part of the year 1855 they were presented to John Routh, then executor of Gordon, deceased, and were indorsed by him as follows :
“Presented and allowed, and will be paid On tho settlement of the estate. ■ “ JOHN ROUTH,
“ Executor estate of J. G. Gordon.”
On the thirtieth October, 1863, tho following'indorsement was made on each of the notes:
“ I hereby waive prescription on the witMn notes. Lake St. Joseph, October 30, I860. “JOHN ROUTH,
“Executor estate of J.JG. Gordon.”
On the twenty-sixth June, 1867, tho plaintiff filed his petition in this case, with tho notes and tlicir indorsements, and on the same day the judgment was rendered, from which tho present executor, Sargent, has appealed.
We think it clear that on tho thirtieth October, 1866, prescription had been acquired upon the notes. We aro’mnablo to perceive how the acknowledgment by the former executor in 1855 could have greater effect than a similar act by the maker in his lifetime; and it is unnecessary to consider what woidd have been'the legal result if this acknowledgment had been followed by an application at that time to the judge to have the claims ranked among the acknowledged debts of *374tlie succession, and the taking of such succeeding steps as are provided by law. C. P. 985, et scq.
The acknowledgments in 1855 amounted to an interruption, and nothing more; and prescription began to run from that date. Succession of Dubreuil, 12 Rob. 507, 511.
It is urged by plaintiff that the dative executor has no right, under the circumstances of this case, to plead prescription; but we do not find, either in precedent or reason, any authority for this proposition. As dative executor it is his duty to defend the succession against the enforcement of claims that have been prescribed, and which are therefore presumed to have been paid. Having this right, the only question remaining in the case is whether the waiver by the former executor, on the thirtieth October, 18G6, was, as to the succession, a valid renunciation of an acquired prescription.
In Lafon’s heirs v. his executors, 3 N. S. 716, it was held that executors cannot, even by a payment, if unauthorized by the court, deprive creditors, legatees and heirs of the protection of an acquired proscription.
In Whittakam v. Swain, 9 Ann. 123, it was held that, inasmuch as the power to renounce prescription could only exist in one haying a capacity to alienate, a tutor could not renounce a prescription liberancli causa acquired by his ward. Following the principles thus settled, and applying them as they would seem to be properly applicable to the facts in the case at bar, we must conclude that the executor, Routh, had no power in I860 to renounce the prescription which had been acquired on these debts, and thus deprive the succession of a vested right.
Upon the face of the record the notes are prescribed, and the judgment appealed from must be reversed.
The appellee having asked that the cause should be remanded in case this conclusion should be reached, it is ordered and adjudged that the judgment of this court heretofore rendered dismissing the appeal be annulled. It is further ordered that the judgment appealed from be avoided and reversed, and the cause remanded to be proceeded with according to law, and that the appellee pay the costs of the appeal.