Bettis v. Nixon
Bettis v. Nixon
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
By the first clause of the Act of 1749, usually called the Insolvent Debtors’ Act, it is provided, that if any person sued,
Upon the construction of this clause, as applicable to this case, three questions are made:—■
1. That there was no order or rule summoning the creditors to appear, except one, by the Clerk, which is not a compliance with the Act. In the year 1759, when this Act was passed, there was no Court in the State out of the city of Charleston, where I presume all the Judges resided. So long as this state of things continued, it was at all times practicable to obtain an order of the Court for notice to creditors to appear. But at a subsequent period, when the population in the interior required the establishment of Nisi Courts, and subsequently of circuit Courts with original jurisdiction, it would have been extremely incon-veniant to require that a Judge’s order should be obtained before the debtor could progress with his application for the benefit of the Act, and hence I presume originated the practice of the Clerk’s granting the order or rule. This practice, although not
2. That in this case there was no affidavit of the publication of the notice. There can be no doubt that the words of the Act should be pursued, and that the fact of publication should be verified by affidavit whenever the creditors neglect or refuse to appeal-. When the creditors do appear it may not be necessary. In this case certain of the creditors did appear; and as to them no affidavit of service may have been necessary: but as the Court cannot know but that there are other creditors, whose rights may be affected, there should always be satisfactory evidence by affidavit of the publication of the notice. The Act does not say by whom the affidavit should be made, but I presume the Clerk or any otheip person knowing the fact would be competent.
3. That the notice in this case does not require the creditors to appear on a day certain. This is certainly necessary, and the notice to appear on day of October, or such other day as the Court may order during the term, is certainly not a compliance with the law. If the three months should expire before the first day of the term, then the notice may be to appear at that time, but if the three months will not expire until after the commencement of the term, then the appearance day must be on some day during the term. To avoid difficulties, it will be proper that the prisoner should make his application on the day specified in his notice, and in that event his application for discharge may be then heard or continued to some other time during the term.
The motion to reverse the decision of the circuit Court is granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.