Mordecai v. LaRissey
Mordecai v. LaRissey
Opinion of the Court
Curia, per
The Insolvent Debtors Act of 1759 directs, that all the creditors of the petitioner should be “ summoned by public notice, to be given three months at least, in one or other of the Gazettes, or for want of a Gazette, then in such manner as the said court, or the Justices thereof, shall direct.” It seems to contemplate a discharge, either by the Courts or by the Justices at Chambers, and was specially adapted to the condition of the province then existing; but, with slight changes made by subsequent statutes, it is yet of force, and has, by practice, been accommodated to the present judicial arrangements of the State. Whether the words “for want of a Gazette” would be satisfied by the non-existence of a Ga
The public notice, which by the Prison Bounds Act of 1788, the clerk is required to give, after the filing of the schedule, is usually given at the Court House door, because no form of giving it is provided by the statute ; and it is intended only to reach the plaintiff, who has made the arrest, and to whom the assignment is to be made, subject to prior incumbrances. In the distinctions between the two Acts, which in 1799 were clearly pointed out by Judge Waties (see the case of Carpenter vs. Kennedy, 2 Brev. Dig. 157, note) it is expressly said, that “ under the Insolvent Debtors Act, the petitioner must be discharged by'the court of Common Pleas, in open court, after notice to all the creditors published in the Gazette.” This decision has long regulated the practice, and renders the court now less careful to respect a partial usage to the contrary, which
The motion is therefore dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.