Barker v. Warren

46 N.H. 124 | N.H. | 1865

Doe, J.

Sec. 1, chap. 35. laws 1843, (enacted as a substitute for sec. 8, chap. 185, Rev. Stats.) provides that the affidavit to authorize arrest in a suit upon contract, shall contain the clause that the defendant " conceals his property so that no attachment or lew can be made. or that there is goocl reason to believe he is about to leave the State to avoid the payment of his debts.” Secs. 9 and 10 of the same chapter of the Rev. Stats, provide that the defendant in such case when arrested, may be discharged by two justices of the peace immediately, or by the court at the return term, if they believe that he does not conceal his property and does not intend to leave the State. In this case, the defendant did intend to leave the State, but not for the purpose of avoiding the payment of his debts; and the question is, whether sec. 10 is to be construed as if It contmEecTthe phrase, ” to avoid the payment of hiiTüebts,” which is in the 8th section.

~~The defect in the old law, and the remedy provided in the new, are to be considered, and one part of a statute is to be construed by another, I that the whole may (if possible) stand. Co. Litt. 381, a, b; 1 Bl. Comm. 87, 89. The defect in the old law was the imprisonment of honest men for debts which they were unfortunately not able to pay. *125The remedy provided was the abolition of imprisonment in such cases, special provision being made for the arrest and imprisonment of dishonest debtors who should attempt fraudulently to avoid payments which they could make. The object of the special provision authorizing arrest was not to prohibit travel or emigration, but to defeat fraud.

Bringing all parts of the statute together to ascertain the meaning of each part, we find that the plaintiff is required to make a statement which is cither immaterial or incontrovertible, unless the phrase, " to avoid the payment of his debts,” is understood to be incorporated in sections 9 and 10. Those sections are so based upon, and connected with, sec. 8, that the phrase is necessarily implied. It can not have been intended that there should be, in the plaintiff’s affidavit, an unnecessary averment of a fraudulent intent, or that the defendant is to be held in custody, although he disprove every allegation of fraud, or that he should not be allowed to refute a charge affecting his personal liberty. The two rules of construction, that the object of a statute is to be regarded, and that the whole of it is to be taken together, are decisive of this case.

Exception overruled.

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