Inhabitants of Mercer v. Inhabitants of Bingham
Inhabitants of Mercer v. Inhabitants of Bingham
Dissenting Opinion
dissented; and
expressed the views of the dissentients in the following opinion: —
The correctness of the ruling in this case, depends upon the proper construction of the Revised Statutes, c. 115, § 22. Until the statute of 1835, c. 165, § 6, the defendant in a suit, “founded on contract, express or implied, bond, or other specialty, or judgment of court,” in which more was claimed than was actually due, had no mode, except by a tender, or bringing money into court under the common rule, of permitting the plaintiff to take judgment for the whole amount to which he was justly entitled, and of avoiding the excess of the plaintiff’s claim, without subjecting himself to all the costs which might accrue in the avoidance of such excess. The hardship of the rule, which subjected a party to the payment of additional costs, when such party, being unable to pay his debt before judgment, was in fact willing that judgment should go against him for the whole amount which the plaintiff was entitled to recover, attracting the attention of the Legislature, was undoubtedly the reason which induced the enactment of the statute of 1835. The object of its provisions, therefore, was to relieve an honest debtor from accumulating costs occasioned solely by the unjust demands of his creditor.
That in the construction of statutes, it is proper to have regard to all the statutes enacted in pari materia, cannot be denied; and, often an existing statute will be much better understood, by examining it, in the light of preceding statutes upon the same subject, although they may have been repealed. We should also keep in view the mischiefs which the statutes were designed to prevent.
It is conceded, that “according to the clear and express words” of both statutes, “the defendant is entitled to costs only upon the happening of two events, — first, that after such offer the plaintiff shall proceed, to trialand, secondly, “ shall recover no greater sum for his debt or damages up to the time when the offer was made,” than the amount specified in the offer. If the statute of 1835 had not contained the provisions which are omitted in the revision, the general purpose of the statute being kept in view, can there be any reasonable doubt as to what was intended by either of the conditions upon which the defendant was to recover his costs ? Was not the offer, provided for by the statute, intended to be substituted in some respects for a tender, and until modified in its effects by the statute of 1847, c. 31, § 2, have not this Court held that such effects were similar to those resulting from a tender, or from bringing money into court under the common rule? Fogg v. Hill, 21 Maine, 529. Indeed, the statute itself speaks of the “offer” and “'judgment” thereon, being tendered.
By the statute of 1847, just cited, it seems to have been the intention to deprive the offer of all its incidental effects
In relation to the second contingency, the plaintiff may properly be said to have recovered no more than the offer, when the judgment, however made up, whether by a trial or otherwise, shows that the amount recovered, up to the time when the offer was made, is no more than the sum specified in the offer. The word “recover,” does not, in itself, of necessity include the idea of a trial. The rendition of a judgment is all that is meant by a recovery under the statute. If, however, the language of either of the statutes, in relation to the contingencies upon which the defendant’s right to costs depends, were susceptible of a different construction, in determining which is to prevail, the court are bound, if the language will fairly admit of it, to adopt that which will best effectuate the general design of the statutes, and remedy the mischiefs which they were intended to prevent. Such construction must prevail, even if the strict letter of the statute would lead to a different result. Acting upon this universally admitted rule, we cannot doubt but that either of the two statutes we have been considering, is, if we lay wholly out of view the provisions in the statute of 1835, which were not incorporated into the statute as revised, not only fairly capable of receiving, but actually requires the construction we have adopted.
Before proceeding to consider the effect of the provisions of the statute of 1835, which were not adopted in the revision of 1840, we will remark that the words “time of trial,” as contained in that part of the revised statute which declares that, upon the happening of the necessary contingencies, “ the defendant shall recover his costs of the plaintiff from the time of such offer, up to the time of trial,” for the reasons before stated, do not mean the time of an actual trial, but the time when the action is disposed of, and the judgment which is required by the second contingency is rendered; the word trial being used to designate what is usually the effect of a trial.
If this omitted part of the statute, as we have seen, is not a grant but a limitation upon rights before granted, then its omission in the statute, when revised, shows a legislative intention to drop the limitation and thus to leave the previous grant in full force. Hence the statute, as revised, provides for the taxation of the defendant’s costs from the time of the offer. That part of the omitted clause which provides that the defendant shall be entitled to recover costs, after the offer, “until the plaintiff shall accept such offer, or surcease his suit, or shall recover a greater sum,” seems to be but a re
From the view which we have taken of the clause which was omitted in the revision of the statute, it appears, that there was nothing in its provisions, or in the fact of its omission, which calls for a construction of the revised statute differing from that which we have arrived at. Such construction can work no injury to the plaintiff, because he has full opportunity, when it is offered, to take a judgment for what is legally his due; and, if he thinks the offer does not embrace so much in amount as he is entitled to receive, he can litigate the question with his debtor; but if he do so, by proceeding on with his cause apparently for trial, and it subsequently turns out that he was in error, he must be held subject to such costs as his election to proceed to trial, has, under the provisions of the statute, imposed.
It will be seen, by referring to the more recent revision of the statutes in 1851, c. 82, § 21, that such revision is in substantial conformity with the construction now given; and perhaps it may not be too much to suppose, that the late Chief Justice of this Court, to whose learning and industry the last revision of the statutes was most judiciously confided, has embodied in the new statute what he regarded as a correct
The conclusion to which we have come, is, that, under the Revised Statutes of 1840, c. 115, § 22, if the defendant make an offer in writing, to be defaulted, and the plaintiff neglects to accept it, but proceeds with his action towards a trial, or apparently for that purpose, the defendant will be entitled to recover his costs after the offer, and the plaintiff cannot recover any costs accruing after it was made, notwithstanding it' may appear that no actual trial was had; provided that it also appear that a judgment was rendered in the suit, and the amount recovered, up to the time of the offer, was no greater than the sum specified therein. The exceptions should, therefore, be sustained.
Opinion of the Court
The defendants were not entitled to costs, and the plaintiffs must have their costs until the default was entered in the action. See Pingree v. Snell, page 53 of this volume, in which case the subject was fully considered.
Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Inhabitants of Mercer versus Inhabitants of Bingham
- Status
- Published