Oakes v. Mitchell

The opinion of the Court, after a continuance for advisement, was drawn up by

Sherley J.

That an executor or administrator may by an express promise take a case out of the statute of limitations appears to be the settled law of England. The like rule of law was recognized in Massachusetts and New-York in the cases of Emerson v. Thompson, 16 Mass. R. 429, and Johnson v. Beardslee, 15 Johns. R. 3. While the Courts in Connecticut and Pennsylvania have come to a different conclusion. Peck v. Batsford, 7 Conn. R. 172; Fritz v. Thomas, 1 Whar. 66.

*362This case does not appear to call for a decision of the point in this State, for no promise by the administrator is proved. An acknowledgment of a present existing debt is not of itself a new promise, but evidence from which one may be inferred. Hyling v. Hastings, 1 Ld. Raym. 389. In determining what language will be sufficient to raise a new promise, there is a distinction between those, who are acting for themselves, and those who are acting in trust for others, which must be regarded. Declarations or acknowledgments, from which a new promise might be inferred, if made by the debtor himself, when made by an executor or administrator, will not be sufficient to charge the estate. There must be a clear agreement or promise to pay. In the case of Tidlock v. Dunn, Ryan & Moody, 416, Abbott C. J. says, “ as against an executor an acknowledgment merely is not sufficient to take a case out of the statute; there must be an express promise.” So in Thompson v. Peter, 12 Wheat. 565, Marshall C. J. says, “ this is not a suit against the original debtor. It is brought against his representative, who may have no personal knowledge of the transaction. Declarations against him have never been held to take the promise of a testator or intestate out of the act. Indeed the contrary has been held.” According to these cases, if the language used by the defendant would ádmit of such a construction as to make it equivalent to an acknowledgment, that the debt was due, it w'ould not be sufficient. Does it amount to a new promise ?

In the case of Perley v. Little, 3 Greenl. 97, it was said, that equivocal expressions ought not by construction to be converted into promises; and that rule should be closely adhered to, when the promise is to be proved, not against the party himself, but against his legal representative. When an administrator says an arrangement will soon be made to pay a demand against the estate, the fair intendment is, that he designs to make such a disposition of the • assets as will enable him to do it. The word, calculate,” properly signifies to compute or reckon, but in this case it must have been used inaccurately and in a different sense. If the language used be examined either together, or each phrase by itself, the idea intended to be conveyed will appear to be, that it was his design or intention to pay the note, and that he had always so intended. Is an intention to do a thing a promise *363to do it ? Apply such language to other transactions and no one would understand, that a contract had been already made. When a purchaser expresses his intention or design to purchase, or if ho should say, he calculates ” to purchase, having reference to a future time, the seller does not understand, that a contract has been made. So here the administrator expresses what his present intention was to do at a future time, but he does not expressly promise that he will do it. And if the witness had at that time pressed him to make a positive promise to pay, he might without any inconsistency have said, no, it is my intention to pay it, but I will make no promise. Without saying, that such language as the defendant has been proved to have used in this case would not be sufficient, when used by a person, who was himself the debtor, to enable a jury to infer a promise, it does not prove that express promise, which, as against an administrator, is necessary to take a case out of the statute.

Exceptions sustained, and new trial granted.