(after stating the facts). The plaintiffs contend that inasmuch as the defendant was continually a *36non-resident of this State, and absent from it except for two- or three brief business visits of a day or two each year, before the action was brought, the statute of limitation does not bar his right to recover the money specified in the bond sued upon, and the interest due upon the same, and we are of that opinion.
The statute (The Code, §162,) provides that, If, when the cause of action accrues, or judgment be rendered or docketed against any person, he shall be out of the State, such action may be commenced, or judgment enforced, within the times herein respectively limited, after the return of such persons into this State ; and if, after such cause of action shall have accrued, or judgment rendered or docketed, such person shall depart from, and reside out of this State, or remain continually absent therefrom for the space of one year or more, the time of his absence shall not be deemed or taken as any part of the time limited for the commencement of such action, or the enforcement of such judgment.”
It will be observed that this statutory provision prescribes and embraces three distinct cases in which the statute of limitation will not operate as a bar because of the continuous lapse of the time prescribed next after the cause of action accrued, or judgment was rendered or docketed: (1.) Where the debtor was out of the State at the time the cause of action accrued, or the judgment was rendered or docketed. This case may apply alike to a resident or non-resident debtor. In it, time does not begin to lapse in his favor until he shall return to the State — not simply on a hasty visit of a day or two, at long intervals — but for the purpose of residence. And if, after such return, he shall depart from the State for the purpose of residence out of it, or to sojourn out of it for a year or more, the time of his absence will not be allowed in his favor; it will be subtracted from the time that would have been so allowed, if he had remained in this State. (2.) When, after the cause of action accrued, or the judgment *37was rendered or docketed, the debtor — resident or non-resident of the State — departed from and resided out of it, “the time of his absence shall not be deemed or taken as any part of the time limited for the commencement of such action, or the enforcement of such judgment.” (3.) When, after the cause of action has accrued, or judgment has been rendered or docketed, the debtor shall depart from the State, “and remain continually absent for the space of one year or more,” the time of his absence shall not be allowed in his favor.
This case seems to apply to a resident of this State against whom there is a cause of action, and who goes and remains out of it for the length of time mentioned.
The general purpose of the statutory provision under consideration, taken in connection with the statute of limitation, is to give the person having a cause of action accrued, or judgment, as prescribed, opportunity substantially during the whole of the lapse of the time against him, to bring his action or enforce his judgment. Thus, in the case before us, if the. defendant was out of this State at the time the plaintiffs’ cause of action accrued, the lapse of time as to it in his favor, did not begin until his return to this State to reside here. Or, if he departed from this State after the maturity of the note sued upon, to reside out of it, or to sojourn out of it for a year or more, the time of his absence could not he allowed to make part of the ten years on which he relied as a bar to the plaintiffs’ action. To make the bar, there must have been a lapse of ten years less the time of such absence.
The purpose is, to prevent defendants from having the benefit of the lapse of time — the statute of limitation — while they permit debts against them, past due, to remain unpaid, or other causes of action against them to remain undischarged, and keep beyond the limits of the State and the jurisdiction of its Courts, and thus prevent the person having the right to sue, from doing so. It is not the policy or pur*38pose of the State, to drive its citizens, directly or indirectly, to seek their legal remedies abroad, or to encourage nonresidents to keep out of it and beyond the jurisdiction of its Courts, as would in some measure be the case, if by keeping out of the State, the debtor or person against whom a cause of action exists, could avail himself of the lapse of time during his absence.
The counsel for the appellant insisted in the argument, that the statute under consideration does not embrace nonresidents of this State. We cannot so interpret it. The words “any person,” employed to designate the persons to be affected and embraced by it, are very comprehensive, and there is nothing in its scope or purpose that excludes them. Why should they be on a more formidable footing as to the lapse of time than residents?
We can see no reason, founded in justice or sound policy, why this should he so. There is nothing in their legal status, or their circumstances as such, or in the nature of the statute of limitation, that ought justly to give them more favorable advantage. If there exists just cause of action against a non-resident in favor of a citizen of this State, properly cognizable here, he ought to discharge it, but if he will not, and stays beyond the State, so that the person aggrieved cannot have his remedy, he ought not to have the benefit of the lapse of time, when at last he is found here, and action has been brought against him. He is not entitled, in common justice, to such defence, and the statute, fairly interpreted, does not give it to him. He cannot reasonably complain of the staleness of his liability, any more than a resident who, under like circumstances, goes out of the State, and resides or remains there for a long while. If the demand is stale he made it so, in contemplation of law, and he shall not be allowed to take advantage of his own laches.
The Courts of. other States have given like interpretation to statutes substantially like that now before us; Bennett v. *39 Cook, 43 N. Y., 537; Carpenter v. Wells, 21 Barb., 594; McCord v. Woodhull, 47 How. Pr. Rep. (N. Y.), 54; Hacher v. Everett, 57 Me., 548; Lane v. Bank, 6 Kan., 74.
There is no error. To the end the judgment may he affirmed, let this opinion he certified according to law. It is so ordered.
No error. Affirmed.