1. Section 5057 of the Revised Statutes (
infra, p.
105 U. S. 642)
does not, in the cases therein mentioned, declare that the court,
wherein the suit is brought more than two years after the cause of
action accrued, shall not have jurisdiction thereof. It is merely a
statute of limitations, and as such should be construed and
enforced.
2. If in a suit by an assignee in bankruptcy it does not appear
that the defendant raised in some appropriate form, in the court of
original jurisdiction the question as to the application of the
statute of limitations, he is precluded from so doing in the
appellate court.
3. The Code of Civil Procedure of the Territory of Wyoming is
not in conflict with this ruling.
The facts are fully stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 105 U. S. 641
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the District Court of the First
Judicial District of the Territory of Wyoming in and for Laramie
County by the assignee in bankruptcy of the Great Western Insurance
Company to recover from Daniel McLaughlin the sum of $800, with
interest at twelve percent, from the fifteenth day of August, 1872,
as the amount due and unpaid on a subscription for ten shares of
the capital stock of the company, owned by McLaughlin. The company
was a corporation of the State of Illinois. In February, 1872, it
was adjudicated a bankrupt by the District Court of the United
States for the Northern District of Illinois, and on the 11th of
April, 1872, the plaintiff was appointed its assignee, and an
assignment of all its property was executed to him. On the 5th of
July, 1872, the bankruptcy court made an order that the entire
amount unpaid of the capital stock of the company be paid to him on
or before the 15th of August, 1872, at his office in Chicago, and
that, in default thereof, he proceed to collect the same. The
amount claimed in this suit is eighty percent on $1,000, being on
ten shares of $100 each. The suit was commenced by a petition filed
April 8, 1876. McLaughlin put in an answer consisting of four
several defenses. The fourth defense set up, as a cause of action
against the company and as a set-off to the claim on which the suit
was brought, that the company, before it was adjudged bankrupt, was
indebted to him on a balance due upon an account in a specified
sum, which was still due, and for which sum he prayed judgment
against the plaintiff. The plaintiff demurred, by one demurrer, to
the second, third, and fourth defenses. The district court
overruled the demurrer as to the second and third defenses and
sustained it as to the fourth defense. To such ruling against the
defendant he excepted. The case was tried by a jury, and a verdict
rendered for the plaintiff assessing his damages at $1,008.
Thereupon a judgment was entered that the assignee recover from
McLaughlin $1,008 and the costs of the action. McLaughlin, by a
petition in error to the supreme court of the territory alleging
thirty-two several errors made by the district court, prayed for a
reversal of the judgment. The supreme court entered
Page 105 U. S. 642
a judgment that the judgment of the district court must be
reversed and held for naught, and then stating, that
"the court, further proceeding to render such judgment as the
said district court ought to have rendered, find that said court
had no jurisdiction of said cause,"
and that it should have rendered judgment in favor of McLaughlin
and against the assignee, and that judgment be rendered in favor of
McLaughlin and against the assignee, and that McLaughlin recover
from the assignee $59.25 costs, and that such judgment be remanded
to the district court for execution, and that a special mandate be
sent to said court therefor. The assignee has brought the case into
this Court by a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the Territory
of Wyoming.
The grounds on which the court proceeded in holding that the
district court had no jurisdiction and in reversing the judgment of
that court are shown by its opinion, which is found in the record.
The opinion proceeds upon the view that because of the provisions
of sec. 5057 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, the
district court had no jurisdiction of the suit. That section is as
follows:
"No suit, either at law or in equity, shall be maintainable in
any court between an assignee in bankruptcy and a person claiming
an adverse interest touching any property or rights of property
transferable to or vested in such assignee unless brought within
two years from the time which the cause of action accrued for or
against such assignee. And this provision shall not in any case
revive a right of action barred at the time when an assignee is
appointed."
The view taken in the opinion is that this statute is not a
statute merely limiting the remedy, but imposes an absolute limit;
that after two years, the assignee can neither sue nor be sued, but
his office, for the purpose of commencing any suit, must be
regarded as having expired; that no court has power to admit him to
a status within the court; and that such want of power is want to
jurisdiction. The opinion delivered by MR. JUSTICE MILLER in
Bailey v.
Glover, 21 Wall. 342, is cited and interpreted as
holding that the statute (then sec. 2 of the Act of March 2, 1867,
c. 176, 14 Stat. 518), is an absolute jurisdictional limitation,
and thus, as an adjudication of the question, furnishing the rule
which governs this case. This
Page 105 U. S. 643
is an entire misconception of that decision. It established the
contrary proposition. It was a suit in equity, in which the
assignee, more than three years after the date of his appointment,
filed a bill against three relatives of the bankrupt to set aside
conveyances made to them by the bankrupt of all his estate in fraud
of his creditors. It alleged that the bankrupt and the defendants
kept secret their fraudulent acts, whereby the assignee and the
creditors were prevented from obtaining any sufficient knowledge or
information thereof until within two years before the filing of the
bill. The defendants demurred to the bill on the ground that the
suit was not brought within two years from the appointment of the
assignee. The demurrer was sustained by the circuit court. The
plaintiff appealed to this Court. The report of the case shows that
the defendants contended here that the case was not one of an
ordinary statute of limitation, but that the statute was imperative
and admitted of no exceptions as to any tribunal. If such
contention had been regarded as correct, the decision of the
circuit court would necessarily have been affirmed. But this Court
held that the statute in question was a statute of limitation, and
one of such a character as not to set up an absolute bar of two
years from the mere lapse of that time, but to require the
application to it of the principle that where there has been no
negligence or laches on the part of a plaintiff in coming to the
knowledge of the fraud which is the foundation of the suit, and
when the fraud has been concealed, or is of such a character as to
conceal itself, the statute does not begin to run until the fraud
is discovered by, or becomes known to, the party suing or those in
privity with him. On this view, this Court reversed the decree
below. This was a plain decision that the statute in question does
not impose an absolute limit of two years after the appointment of
the assignee in respect to transactions which occurred before such
appointment, and that there is no want of power in the court to
entertain a suit after such two years have elapsed. This view was
recognized and applied in
Gifford v. Helms, 98 U. S.
248, although there it was held that on the facts, the
assignee's right of action commenced at the time of his
appointment. It is therefore clear that no support for the
decision
Page 105 U. S. 644
below is to be drawn from
Bailey v. Glover. The
question is not to be treated as one of power or jurisdiction, but
as one dependent on the principles applicable to statutes of
limitation generally.
This being so, the record shows that no question as to the
application of the statute to the case was raised in the district
court of the territory by the defendant either in pleading or on
the trial or before judgment. It is too late for a defendant who
does not take, prior to a judgment against him, the point that the
action is barred by a statute of limitation to raise the point for
the first time in an appellate court. This principle is always
applied to questions which are not questions of jurisdiction.
Storm v. United States, 94 U. S. 76,
94 U. S. 81.
It is, however, contended by the defendant that the question of
the bar by the statute was presented in the supreme court of the
territory by the record from the district court because the
petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of
action and could have been demurred to for that cause. Sec. 85 of
the Code of Civil Procedure of the territory provides that the
defendant may demur to the petition when it appears upon its face
either that the court has no jurisdiction or that the petition does
not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Sec. 87
provides that the objection to the jurisdiction of the court, and
the objection that the petition does not state the facts sufficient
to constitute a cause of action, shall not be deemed to be waived
by not taking them by either demurrer or answer. It is contended
that a petition which shows upon its face that the cause of action
is barred by a statute of limitation is a petition which does not
state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that
that objection, though not taken by demurrer or answer, may be
taken at any time. But we are of opinion that the statutory
provisions referred to cannot properly be construed as allowing the
defense of a bar by a statute of limitation to be raised for the
first time in an appellate court even though the petition might
have been demurred to as showing on its face that the cause of
action is so barred, and thus as not stating facts sufficient to
constitute a cause of action.
The petition in this case sets out facts which show that the
Page 105 U. S. 645
cause of action sued on accrued to the assignee more than two
years before the bringing of the suit. Assuming the suit to be such
a suit as is mentioned in sec. 5057, it is held by the Supreme
Court of Wyoming, in
Bonnifield v. Price, 1 Wy. 172, that
the rule is well established in that territory, that where from the
face of the petition it is apparent without any further showing
that the claim is barred by a statute of limitation, a defendant
may take advantage of such bar by a special demurrer to the
petition. The same rule prevails in Ohio,
Sturges v.
Burton, 8 Ohio St. 215;
McKinney v. McKinney,
id. 423; in Kansas,
Zane v. Zane, 5 Kan. 134; and
in Nebraska,
Peters v. Dunnells, 5 Neb. 460. The rule is
founded on the view that in such a case the petition does not state
facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. But if, in the
court of original jurisdiction, the defense of a statute of
limitation is not raised by either demurrer or answer, and is not
brought to the attention of the court which tries the cause, by
some objection taken in a proper manner, before judgment, it
cannot, under sec. 87 of the Code of Wyoming, be raised for the
first time in an appellate court. The effect of that section is
only to permit the defendant to make the objection after demurrer
or answer, and before judgment. Under such a statutory provision,
it has been held that at the trial, and even after the evidence is
all in, the objection may first be made,
Coffin v.
Reynolds, 37 N.Y. 640;
Zane v. Zane, 5 Kan. 134; and
that it may be made by stating it distinctly as a ground of
objection to the introduction of evidence.
Zane v. Zane, ubi
supra. But unless it appeared by the record which was before
the Supreme Court of Wyoming in this case, that the objection had
been taken in some proper manner in the district court, the supreme
court could not notice it. That court has power (Code, sec. 513) to
reverse a judgment of the district court for errors appearing on
the record, and the petition in error (sec. 514) must set forth the
errors complained of. Neither in the bill of exceptions nor in the
twenty-eight errors specified in the motion for a new trial in the
district court, nor in the thirty-two errors specified in the
petition in error, is there any allusion to the statute of
limitation.
The defendant contends that as the district court sustained
Page 105 U. S. 646
the demurrer to the fourth defense in the answer and the
defendant excepted to the ruling, the question as to whether the
petition was sufficient as a pleading was thereby brought up,
because the district court ought to have given judgment against the
party which committed the first fault in pleading. But we are of
opinion that the record must show that the question as to whether
it appeared by the petition that the action was barred by the
statute was distinctly presented to and raised before the district
court. This does not appear, as before stated.
The defendant also contends that various objections and
exceptions taken by him to the admission of evidence, and to
instructions to the jury, and various grounds of error stated in
the motion for a new trial, raised the question referred to. It is
sufficient to say that the objections to the admission of evidence
merely state that the evidence is incompetent, immaterial, and
irrelevant, without suggesting the question of the statute of
limitation, and that the exceptions to the instructions to the jury
and the grounds of error set forth in the motion for a new trial
make no allusion to that question, nor is there any allusion to it
in the record sent from the district court. Under such
circumstances, the question cannot be raised in the appellate
court.
Mays v.
Fritton, 20 Wall. 414, and cases there cited;
Beaver v. Taylor, 93 U. S. 46;
Wheeler v. Sedgwick, 94 U. S. 1.
Because the Supreme Court of Wyoming held that the district
court had no jurisdiction of this suit, it did not examine any of
the questions raised by the defendant in the bill of exceptions
taken by him. As it improperly reversed the judgment of the
district court, its judgment must be reversed, and as it passed on
no other question but the jurisdiction of the district court, the
case must, under the provisions of secs. 701 and 702 of the Revised
Statutes, be remanded to it with directions to hear and determine
the questions raised by the petition in error and to take such
further proceedings as may be in conformity with law and not
inconsistent with the opinion of this court, and it is
So ordered.
NOTE --
Upton v. Kent, error to the Supreme Court of
the Territory of Wyoming, was submitted at the same time as the
preceding case, and was argued by
Page 105 U. S. 647
the same counsel for the plaintiff in error and by Mr. Samuel
Shellabarger and Mr. Jeremiah M. Wilson for the defendant in
error.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD, in delivering the opinion of the Court,
remarked that the facts and the questions raised were essentially
the same in both cases. The same judgment was entered in this case
as in
Upton v. McLaughlin.