Botts v. Pollard
Botts v. Pollard
Opinion of the Court
I am of opinion that the judgment in this case is erroneous. The question turns upon the true construction of the act, 1 Rev. Code, ch. 128, § 69, p. 506. By that section it is provided that rules shall be holden in the clerk’s office on the first monday of every month, and may be continued from day to day, not exceeding six days.
If the clerk is to be considered as having a discretion as to the time of closing the rules in any cause, I should not hesitate to say that he has exercised his discretion unsoundly, and that the general principles which he has avowed as to the conduct of the rules are altogether inadmissible. He tells us it is his usual practice to keep the rules open the whole week for some purposes, such as receiving declarations and return of process, but that as to causes situated as this was, he usually ^closed the rules on the first day, if he had an opportunity of doing so. Now this seems to me unequal, unjust, and contrary to law. All parties, defendants as well as plaintiffs, are entitled to the same measure of indulgence in the administration of justice ; and if the rules can be kept open for the accommodation of plaintiffs, the same accommodation should be extended to the defendants.
In the case at bar, the rules were peremptorily closed on the first day, though by law, for the convenience of suitors, they are authorized to be kept open for six days. If there is little business in a court, this cannot be necessary ; if there is much it cannot be proper ; for the very object of enlarging the rules is to give time to the suitors and officers to do the business as it ought to be done. So far from hastening to close the rules, so as to exclude defendants from their right to plead, the clerk (if he has a discretion) should so exercise it as to give to the party the last convenient moment for .making his defence. What that time may be, need not be decided. It is enough to say that if the clerk could close the whole rules in a day, there could have been no press of business which could make it unreasonable to keep them open, even to the last hour of the six days. I think, therefore, that the proceedingin this case was altogether irregular and unreasonable, and should have been corrected, even if we admit the discretion claimed for himself by the clerk.
Whether the clerk has any discretion in this matter, further than to reject the pleading where it is offered so late in rules that he has not time to enter it before the last hour of the sixth day, I very much question. That they cannot legally be closed on the first day as to all matters, is obvious from this, that a - writ may be duly executed at any time before the return day has passed ; that is to say, a writ returnable to the rules may be lawfully executed at any time before sunset of the first rule *day. But if the rules are closed on that day, how is the defendant to appear ? He is to appear, indeed, on the return day of the writ. But it was always held by that able officer judge White, that the six days are by a fiction of law but one day, as in the case of the court itself, and that the defendant might therefore appear on any of the rule days of the rules to which the writ is returnable. If so, the rules cannot be closed as to him, and he may appear at any time before the last hour of the sixth day, in convenient time to have the entry made. If he is too late to have the entry made, it is his own fault, and he pays the penalty; for by his negligence he loses the opportunity of appearing. But if the defendant has a right to appear at any of the six days, because the six days together make but one day, why shall he not have the six -days also to comply with the terms of the common order ? That order, indeed, expires on the next rule day ; 1 Rev. Code, ch. 128, § 74. But that rule day is composed of six days, and if he appears before the end of
*As to the offer of the plaintiff to permit the defendant to plead upon a condition ; that formed no ground of the court’s judgment, for it was subsequent, and moreover the defendant was in nowise bound to accept it, and to surrender his rights under the statute.
In like manner, I deem it unimportant to enquire whether he has sustained any injury by the decision. It would not only be difficult to ascertain this, but it would be improper to deny him what he had by law a right to demand, upon a mere speculation as to the detriment which he has received.
I am, on the whole matter, of opinion to reverse the judgment, and send the cause back to the rules.
Judgment reversed, all the proceedings subsequent to the common order set aside, and cause remanded to the circuit court, to be sent to the rules and further proceeded in.
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