Admitting partial payment was made prior to the expiration date and that it never met or maintained the terms of the note. I have a receipt form we would both sign and state the amount of payment. Proves that months after we entered into the note the average payment was not maintained and that payments resumed years later. The note stated if the payments fell below an average amount that an interest penalty would be applied. That to me is a cause of action starting the SOL and supporting my case for when it began.
What event triggers the so-called "
interest penalty" has nothing whatsoever to do with the issue. That issue is whether or not your partial payment served to toll or suspend the running of the 6-year statute of limitations and constituted an acknowledgement of the debt.
Here you admit that the payment was made within the 6-year period and that it was expressly acknowledge in writing by both you and the holder of the note clearly, distinctly and unequivocally identifying the debt and the purpose of the payment as a credit to the debt.
Under these circumstances even if the statute had expired, such would or could serve to revive the debt. That is, an unequivocally admission/acknowledgement of a time-barred debt (in writing as per the receipt) and implying a new promise.
In sum this specious argument of yours that ONLY THOSE payments as expressly provided by the note; to-wit:
"an average payment maintained, blah, blah, blah . . ." can serve to toll or suspend the running of the statute is pure sophistry and will, as it did at in the trial court, fall on deaf ears!
Plus, if applicable, increase what you will be taxed as payment of the plaintiff/appellee's attorney fees!