McCutchen v. Currier

Decision Date08 November 1900
Citation47 A. 923,94 Me. 362
PartiesMcCUTCHEN v. CURRIER.
CourtMaine Supreme Court

(Official.)

Agreed statement from superior court, Kennebec county. Action by John R. McCutchen against Samuel Currier. Submitted on agreed statement. Judgment for defendant.

Argued before WISWELL, C. J., and WHITEHOUSE, STROUT, SAVAGE, and POWERS, JJ.

E. W. Whitehouse, for plaintiff.

Fred Emery Beane, for defendant.

SAVAGE, J. Action of trespass to recover damages for an assault and battery alleged to have been committed September 12, 1894. Plea, the general issue and the statute of limitations. The case shows that the plaintiff became insane about one month after the alleged assault, and has so continued ever since. He was adjudged insane June 27, 1899, and on the same day a guardian was appointed. Subsequently the guardian brought this action. The defendant has all the time been a resident of Kennebec county, and the plaintiff has been under no disability to sue, except insanity. The sole question presented is whether, under this state of facts, the action is barred by the statute of limitations. We think it is.

Rev. St. c. 81, § 84, provides that actions of assault and battery shall be commenced within two years after the cause of action accrues. This cause of action accrued September 12, 1894. More than two years had elapsed when this action was commenced. It was therefore barred by the statute.

But the plaintiff claims that this action is taken out of the provisions of section 84, which we have cited, by section 88, which reads as follows: "If a person entitled to bring any of the aforesaid actions is a minor or a married woman, insane, imprisoned, or without the limits of the United States when the cause of action accrues, the action may be brought within the times limited herein after the disability is removed."

We think, however, that the plaintiff does not bring himself within the provisions of this latter section, for he was not insane when the cause of action accrued. Relief is afforded by section 88 only when the disability existed when the cause of action accrued. Such is the express language of the statute, and we cannot enlarge or qualify it. To the same effect, also, are the authorities. Butler v. Howe, 13 Me. 397; Phillips v. Sinclair, 20 Me. 269; Eager v. Com., 4 Mass. 182; De Arnaud v. U. S., 151 U. S. 483, 14 Sup. Ct 374, 38 L. Ed. 244; Wood Lim. Act. § 239.

When the statute of limitations has once begun to run, it is not...

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6 cases
  • Lewis v. Gupta
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Eastern District of Virginia
    • June 3, 1999
    ... ... See McCutchen v ... Page 617 ... Currier, 94 Me. 362, 47 A. 923 (1900) ("When the statute of limitations has once begun to run, it is not interrupted by a ... ...
  • Maine Medical Center v. Cote
    • United States
    • Maine Supreme Court
    • July 11, 1990
    ...dependent on another to assert his rights does not per se offend article I, section 19 of the Maine Constitution. See McCutchen v. Currier, 94 Me. 362, 47 A. 923 (1900) (disability arising after accrual of cause of action barred by two-year statute of limitations). The only issue of constit......
  • Douglas v. York County, 05-1940.
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — First Circuit
    • December 28, 2005
    ...disability has been removed. The 1950s amendment substituted the phrase "mental illness" for the word "insanity." See McCutchen v. Currier, 94 Me. 362, 47 A. 923 (1900) (quoting prior tolling statute). Neither side has provided us with any legislative history as to the reasons for this chan......
  • Hughes v. Roosevelt
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Second Circuit
    • December 4, 1939
    ...result, where, however, the time interval was greater. Calumet Elec. Street Ry. Co. v. Mabie, 66 Ill.App. 235 (8 months); McCutchen v. Currier, 94 Me. 362, 47 A. 923 (1 month); and Chilford v. Central City Cold Storage Co., 166 Misc. 780, 3 N.Y.S.2d 386 (8 years before adjudication of Here ......
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