Hurst, Purnell & Co. v. Samuels
Hurst, Purnell & Co. v. Samuels
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs in the above stated cases brought their actions against the defendant, and under affidavits charging fraud, they each obtained orders for his arrest. Under these orders defendant ivas arrested on the 29th of January, 1887, and gave bail, and soon thereafter moved before the clerk for orders vacating the orders of arrest, which motions were refused by the clerk, and defendant appealed to the Court of Common Pleas. From this time forward the two cases seem to have been treated as one and will be so treated in this opinion. At the ensuing term of the court judgment was obtained against the defendant, and before any execution was issued, Judge Pressley heard the appeal from the clerk and dismissed the same, but granted an order staying the issue of execution until the hearing of a motion to be made before him, in the exercise of his original jurisdiction, to vacate the order of arrest. This motion was subsequently heard by the judge at chambers, and on the 11th of April, 1887, he filed his decision and order refusing to vacate the order of arrest, and on the same day plaintiffs issued their execution, which being returned nulla bona, they immediately issued execution against the person of defendant and he was arrested and lodged in jail.
The defendant, upon giving the bond required, was admitted to the privilege of the jail bounds, and in due time thereafter filed his petition and schedule praying the benefit of the insolvent debtor’s act. On reading and filing this petition, the clerk granted an order citing the creditors to appear before him on a day specified. On the day appointed, counsel for plaintiffs appeared and moved to dismiss the petition upon the several grounds stated in the notice of the motion, all of which is set out in the record. The clerk refused the motion of plaintiffs to dismiss the petition, whereupon plaintiffs gave notice of appeal upon the same grounds as those stated in their notice of motion. It
It seems to us that the real questions which we are called upon to decide in this somewhat complicated ease arise only out of the decision of Judge Norton. The appeal from Judge Pressley’s order refusing to vacate the order of arrest is not properly before us. That was a separate and independent matter, and should have been the subject of a separate appeal. It was not such an intermediate order as was susceptible of review under air appeal from the final judgment, under subdivision 1 of section 11 of the Code, because it did not involve the merits. The only question before Judge Pressley was, not as to the merits of the action, nor as to the merits of the question involved in the final appeal, but simply whether such a showing had been made as justified the clerk in granting the order of arrest. He had no power to adjudicate finally the question of fraud, as that was a matter for a jury, and it is very manifest from the language of his order that he did not undertake to exercise any such power; but, on the contrary, in terms left that question for a jury to decide. The appeal from such an order falls more properly under subdivision 3 of section 11 of the Code, and not under subdivision 1 of that section ; and as the notice of appeal was not followed up by the necessary steps to perfect such appeal, we cannot regard it as properly before us, and therefore decide nothing as to whether there was any error in refusing to vacate the order of arrest. We may add, too, that even if that appeal could, be regarded as properly before us, it would be very difficult to see how we could undertake to pass upon some of the errors imputed to Judge Pressley in the argument here, as it does not appear that such points were raised in the court below.
As we understand it, the material question involved in the appeal from Judge Norton’s decree is, whether a person in custody under an execution, issued under section 808 of the Code, is entitled to apply for the benefit of the insolvent debtors’ act. It seems to be admitted that under the General Statutes of 1872 this question would have to be answered in the affirmative, but it is claimed that as the law now' stands, and as it has stood since the adoption of the General Statutes of 1882, the question must be answered in the negative. This claim is based upon the ground that so much of the General Statutes of 1872 as contemplated and provided for such an application by a person in arrest under an execution has been repealed by the provisions of the General Statutes of 1882, which provide only for persons in arrest under mesne process. Two questions are therefore presented: 1st. Whether the provisions of the General Statutes of 1872, covering the case of a person in arrest under execution, have been repealed by the provisions of the General Statutes of 1882. 2nd. If so, whether the provisions of the General Statutes of 1882, must necessarily be confined to persons in arrest under mesne process.
It is not and cannot be pretended that the provisions of the General Statutes of 1872 upon this subject have been expressly repealed, but it is contended that the provisions of the General Statutes of 1882 cover the whole subject matter, and thus supersede those of 1872. The only acts or parts of acts which are expressly repealed by the General Statutes of 1882 (see section 2739) are those “the provisions whereof are re-enacted in this act, or which are inconsistent with, or repugnant to, this act.” Hence to show that there is an express repeal, it must first be shown either that the old law has been re-enacted, or that its provisions are inconsistent with or repugnant to the new. Now, it is quite clear that the decision of Judge Norton cannot stand
It is, however, earnestly insisted that while the old law has not been expressly repealed, yet it has been repealed by implication; that the substitution of sections 2405 to 2423 (both inclusive) of General Statutes of 1882, for sections 9 to 14, and sections 22 to 32 of chapter CXXIII., of the General Statutes of 1872, with the change of phraseology there employed, shows that the legislature intended that the law after that time should be as then declared, and should no longer be as it was under the old sections for which the new have been substituted, and hence that the old law has been repealed by implication. We must admit that there is great force in this view; but when we remember the well settled doctrine that repeals by implication are not favored, and that an implication to work a repeal must be a necessary one; and especially when we remember that the question involved in this case affects personal liberty, it behooves us to consider very carefully whether the implication under which a repeal is claimed in this case is a necessary one.
Conceding for the present that the change in the phraseology employed in the several sections of the General Statutes of 1882 from that used in the sections of the General Statutes of 1872, would render it necessary to construe the law of 1882,.standing alone, so as to confine its operations to persons in arrest under
We hesitate to conclude that the legislature, by this mere change of phraseology, intended to repeal a provision of the old law, by which a person in arrest under final process could apply for the benefit of the insolvent debtors’ act, and thus establish a distinction between persons in arrest under mesne, and those in arrest under final, process, for which no sufficient reason can be given. And when we find, in addition to this, that the legislature has allowed this privilege to a person in arrest under final process to enforce the payment of a fine imposed for a violation of the criminal law (General Statutes, 2662), we can hardly suppose that they intended to deny the same privilege to a mere debtor, even though charged, but not yet convicted of fraud. Again, it will be observed that negative words are not used in the General Statutes of 1882. The privilege is not denied to any other class of persons, but even under the concession above made, it simply extends the privilege to those in arrest under mesne process, without any words denying it to others.
The views presented above are not without the support of authority. In the recent work of Endlich on the Interpretation of Statutes, the author, after having mentioned the general rule as to the effect of a revision or codification of statutes, with an intent to substitute the new legislation for the old, in repealing the old law by implication, proceeds in section 203 to qualify this rule as follows: “The rule of implied repeal is clearly inapplicable
The same author, in section 205, in speaking of the extent of the repeal by implication, says: “But in all matters of repeal resulting by implication from an affirmative act, except where the intent, appearing from a design to substitute the new law for the old in toto, is clearly to the contrary, it must be remembered that the repeal extends only so far as the provisions of the statutes affecting each other are inconsistent; the old law being in all other respects left in full force and effect” — citing Wood v. United States, 16 Peters, 342; McCool v. Smith, 1 Black, 459, and many other cases. And he adds, upon the authority of Daviess v. Fairbairn, 3 How., 636: “Whatever portions of the old law may be incorporated with the new, as being consistent with the latter, must be deemed to remain in force.”
Now, as we have seen that the General Statutes, in section 2739, do expressly declare what effect, by way of repeal, they shall have upon the old law, there is no room for implication, and only such “acts and parts of acts the provisions whereof are re-enacted in this act, or which are inconsistent with or repugnant to this act” can be regarded as repealed. And if, as we have seen (Cape Girardeau v. Hill, supra), the omission of a statute from a revision does not operate a repeal, it Avould seem to follow that the mere omission of some of the provisions of the previous law, should not be regarded as a repeal of such provi
But if Ave could reach the conclusion that the old laAv upon this subject has been repealed by the neAv, the question would still A’emain Avhether the provisions of the neAv law are to be confined to persons in arrest under mesne pi'ocess, leaving persons in arrest under final process without any right to the privileges conferred by General Statutes of 1882, in sections 2405-2423. It is not to be denied that there are expressions in some of those sections Avhich, at first view, Avould seem to indicate that the privileges therein provided for are extended only to those in arrest under mesne process, but it seems to us that a more careful scrutiny Avarrants us in saying that such Avas not the intention of the legislature. It does not seem to us that the reference in section 2405 to chapter I., title 7, of the Code of Procedure was designed to limit the provisions of that and the succeeding sections to those Avho were arrested on mesne process, but was rather designed to indicate the class of cases in which the benefit of the provisions of those sections might be invoked. The defendant is clearly a person arrested under the provisions of chapter I., title 7, of the Code, for without those provisions he could not laAvfully be under arrest at all. It is true that, in a limited sense, he is under arrest by virtue of the provisions of section 308 of the Code, but such arrest could not lawfully have been made except by virtue of the provisions of sections 200 and 202, apart of the chapter and title of the Code above referred to, and those sections are expressly referred to in section 308 as authority for the arrest, or rather as indicating the cases in Avhich the arrest therein provided for might be made. This reference, therefore, to that chapter and title of the code does not necessarily limit the provisions of chapter 96 of the General Statutes of 1882 to persons in arrest under mesne process, as persons in arrest under final process may also, in an enlarged sense, be regarded as persons arrested by virtue of the provisions of chapter I., title 7, of the Code.
Then, again, the language used in section 2406 gives countenance to the idea that the intention Avas to embrace both classes of persons — those in arrest under final process, as well as those
It does not seem to us that section '207 of the Code as amended in 1882, affords any aid to the view contended for by the plaintiffs. That section originally read as follows : “The defendant, at any time before execution, shall be discharged from the arrest, either upon giving bail or depositing the amount mentioned in the order of arrest, as provided in this chapter;” but in 1882 the following words were added to the section : “Or he may be discharged under the provisions of sections 2405 to 2428, inclusive, of the General Statutes.” It is claimed that the additional mode of obtaining a discharge provided for by the words added in 1882 must be qualified by the Avords “before execution” in the first part of the section as it originally stood, and that this shoAvs that the intention was to confine the privilege afforded by sections 2405 to 2423 to persons under arrest under mesne process — that the application for the benefit of such privileges must be made “before execution.”
In the first place, it will be observed that the section as originally read only provided for a discharge “from the arrest,” while the amendment provided for a discharge front the debt — a very different thing. It was therefore quite natural and proper that the time Avithin which the defendant should be entitled to a discharge from the arrest in the manner originally provided for should be limited by the AYords “before execution,” but Ave can conceive of no reason why the application for a discharge of a totally different character and effect should be so limited. The
The result of the whole matter is, that inasmuch as the provisions of the General Statutes of 1882 are not inconsistent with, or repugnant to, the provisions of the General Statutes of 1872, so far as they relate to the class of persons who may be entitled to apply for the benefits of the insolvent debtors’ act, the one cannot be regarded as repealing the other unless the same provisions are re-enacted by the later act; and inasmuch as we think the provisions of the General Statutes of 1882, sections 2405-2428, may, by a liberal construction, be regarded as re-enacting those provisions of the General Statutes of 1872 which relate to the class of persons who may be entitled to apply for the benefit of the insolvent debtors’ act, the later act does repeal the former; and hence we are of opinion that the defendant, though arrested under final process, was entitled to apply for the benefit of the insolvent debtors’ act as re-enacted by the General Statutes of 1882, and that Judge Norton erred in ruling otherwise.
Under this view the other questions raised become immaterial, and need not therefore bo considered.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of Judge Norton be reversed, and that the case be remanded for such further proceedings as may be necessary to carry out the views herein announced.
Reference
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- HURST, PURNELL & CO. v. SAMUELS WEILLER & SON v. SAME
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- 1. On appeal from a decree refusing to admit a prisoner in arrest under final process to the benefit of the Insolvent Debtor’s Act, a previous order refusing to vacate the order of arrest cannot be reviewed, as it was not an intermediate order under subd. 1 of section 11 of the Code, but a final order under subd. 3. 2. A provision in the General Statutes of 1882 authorizing the discharge of an insolvent debtor under arrest under mesne process is not inconsistent with or repugnant to a provision in the General Statutes of 1872, authorizing the discharge of a prisoner under mesne or final process, and therefore does not on these grounds repeal the provision as to final process in the older law. But as the same provision is reenacted in the later act, such a repeal is thereby effected. 3. Repeals of statutes by implication are not favored. Such a repeal is not effected unless the implication is a necessary one. This is especially so where such a repeal would injuriously affect personal liberty. 4. Chapter CXVL — 2405-2423—of the General Statutes extends the benefits of the Insolvent Debtor’s Act to persons in arrest under final process, as well as to those in arrest under mesne process ; and this is not affected by section 207 of the Code as amended in the revision of 1882.