after stating tbe case: We need not stop to inquire whether S. E. King bad sufficient authority to enter into tbe agreement with W. E. Dowd, by which tbe latter was discharged from all liability upon tbe debt due to tbe plaintiff by Dowd & King, as we decide tbe case upon another ground, though we are inclined to tbe opinion that there was no' evidence of authorization or of ratification by tbe plaintiff.
Tbe plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by tbe statute of limitations, in any view of tbe evidence. It was not denied that W. E. Dowd paid tbe money to tbe plaintiff through its general manager, S. E. King, in full satisfaction and discharge of bis liability to tbe plaintiff. It was only contended that King bad no express authority to make tbe settlement with Dowd, and that there was no ratification of bis act by tbe plaintiff, and especially that King was interested in tbe transaction and could not, therefore, represent bis principal so as to bind it. "Whether tbe agent must derive some personal benefit from tbe transaction in order to disqualify him to act for bis principal and so as to produce a conflict between bis own interest and that of bis principal, is another question, which was ably argued before us, but tbe discussion of which we may well pretermit.
If W. E. Dowd paid tbe money to King as general manager in satisfaction of bis liability, it is not within tbe power of tbe plaintiff to repudiate bis act as being one not authorized, and apply tbe money as a payment on tbe debt. Tbe money must be accepted according 'to tbe intention of tbe parties to tbe transaction and applied accordingly; that is, to tbe full discharge of Dowd’s liability, or rejected for tbe want of *195authority, in which case the parties would be restored to their original rights. Sound morality and fair dealing imperatively require the law to apply this rule to our business affairs. The plaintiff is not permitted “to blow hot and cold,” or to accept and reject at the same time. As the two rights are conflicting, the law gives to it an election to ratify the act of its agent when it was discovered and thereby discharge Dowd, or to reject the unauthorized act and stand upon its rights, unaffected by it. This principle is such a just and salutary one that it would surprise us if we should find that the law had not adopted it. But the law has, and by the decisions of this very Court it has been fully recognized and applied to cases very much like the one at bar. What stronger statement of the doctrine do we need than the language of the Court in Hewlett v. Schenck, 82 N. C., 234, as follows: “A partial payment, though the evidence need not be in writing, being an act and not a mere declaration, revives the liability, because it is deemed a recognition of it and an assumption anew of the balance due. But if at the time such payment is made the presumption arising from the unexplained fact is disproved by the attending circumstances or other sufficient evidence of a contrary intent, the payment will not have such effect. Here, not only can no- inference of such intention be inferred, but there was an express agreement that ITart was not to be held responsible for the residue of his principal’s defalcation, and the payment is made upon that understanding. While the chairman had no authority to enter into such an engagement, and if he had, it would be inoperative for want of a consideration, as is held in McKenzie v. Culbreth, 66 N. C., 534; Bryan v. Foy, 69 N. C., 45, and Mitchell v. Sawyer, 71 N. C., 70, the evidence is competent and sufficient to repel the presumption of intention to assume the entire debt. Smith v. Leeper, 32 N. C., 86; Angelí Lim., 211, ei seep, note, and numerous other cases cited for the defendants from reports in other States.” The law as to the legal effect *196of a partial payment in discharging the entire debt, where there is an agreement of that kind, has been changed by the Acts of 1874-N5, ch. 178 (Revisal, sec. 859). But that change does not in the least impair the force of the case we have cited as a conclusive authority against the plaintiff upon the facts in the record before us. The Revisal, sec. 371, declares as follows: “No acknowledgment or promise shall be received as evidence of a new or continuing contract from which the statute of limitations shall run, unless the same be contained in some writing signed by the party to be charged thereby, but this section shall not alter the effect of any payment of principal or interest.” It will be seen that there is no express provision that a partial payment shall prevent the operation of the statute except from the time it was made. The statute merely leaves its effect to be determined by the law as it was before the enactment of the section as to a new promise. There was no reference in the Statute of 21 Jas. I., ch. 26, to a payment as operating to stop the running of the statute and as fixing a new terminus a quo, as in the case of a promise to pay. A payment was allowed this effect by the courts, and for the reason that it raised an implied promise to pay the residue of the debt. But the rule is limited in its application to the reason upon which it is based, and the payment consequently must have been made under such circumstances as will warrant the clear inference that the debtor recognized the debt as then existing, and his willingness, or at least his obligation, to pay the balance. Battle v. Battle, 116 N. C., 161; Pickett v. King, 34 Barbour (N. Y.), 193 ; Richardson v. Thomas, 13 Gray, 381; 1 Wood on Limitations, sec. 99 ; Bank v. Harris, 96 N. C., 121; Riggs v. Roberts, 85 N. C., 151. The payment should be of such a nature and made in such a way as to imply in law that the debtor acknowledges the debt as still existing and promises distinctfy and unequivocally to pay the same, just as Lord Ellenborough, in Fleming v. Hayne, 1 Starkie, 370, said should be the char*197acter of the promise when it is express. In 25 Cyc. of Law, p. 1373, we find it said: “A payment of part, in full satisfaction of the whole, or accompanied by acts or declarations showing that the debtor does not intend to pay the balance, will not suspend the statute or revive the balance of a barred debt.” Linsell v. Bonsor, 29 E. C. L., 319 (9 Bing. N. C., 241); Jones v. Langhorne, 19 Col., 206; Brisbin v. Farmer, 16 Minn., 215; Compton v. Bowns, 25 N. Y. Suppl., 465 (5 Misc., 213); Rowker v. Harris, 30 Vt., 424; United States v. Wilder, 13 Wall., 254; Crow v. Gleason, 141 N. Y., 489; Aldrich v. Morse, 28 Vt., 642; Hale v. Morse, 49 Conn., 481; Jewitt v. Petit, 4 Mich., 508; Croushore v. Knox, 10 Atl. Rep., 25. In Compton v. Bowns, supra, the Court (at page 466) says: “It is elementary law that the effect of part, payment in defeating the operation of the statute of limitations depends upon the promise it implies to pay the residue; but if the payment be intended, not as a discharge pro tanto, but as a complete liquidation of the entire demand, how can an engagement to pay more be inferred ? The implication of an acknowledgment of the continuance of the debt from an act supposed and designed to extinguish it, and of a promise of further payment from a payment made and intended as final and complete, is a palpable absurdity,” citing Weston v. Hodgkins, 136 Mass., 326, and other authorities. Compton v. Bowns seems tó be directly in point as to all the questions considered by us in this case. The general principle on which part payment takes a case out of the statute is, that the party paying intended by it to acknowledge and admit the greater debt to be due. If it was not in the mind of the debtor to do this, then the statute, having begun to run, will not be stopped by reason of such payment. United States v. Wilder, supra.
The intention of W. F. Dowd to pay only in full settlement and discharge of his liability is too plain in this case to admit of the slightest doubt. lie expressly stipulated for exemption from payment of the balance of the debt.
*198The law will not permit the amount collected by the Dowd & King Supply Company from Dowd & King, to-wit, $34, and credited on their account without any authority from them, and the amount collected, $6.25, to be considered as constituting a mutual account between the parties, so as to put the statute in motion only from the last item. In Hussey v. Burgwyn, 51 N. C., 385, it was said that the sending of a draft to the creditor, without any reference to the debt, was not sufficient to stop the running of the statute. It was also held that, in order to make an account a continuing one from its commencement to its close, there must be mutual accounts between the parties, or an account of mutual dealings kept by one only, with the knowledge and concurrence of the other, for otherwise an item within'time cannot have the effect of preventing the application of the statute. As said in that case, “Here there was no mutual account kept by the parties, and there was no proof that the defendant entrusted the plaintiff to keep such an one.” The $6.25 for merchandise was a distinct item, disconnected from the prior account, Dowd & King having gone out of business and being then in liquidation, and the credit of $34 for collections was applied to the old account without authority. There was no semblance of a mutuality of accounts. The cause of action accrued not later than 28 February, 1903, and was barred on 1 March, 1906, when the action was brought.
The charge of the Court was, therefore, erroneous. It should have been the very reverse of what it was as to the third issue.
New Trial.