2 Ga. 252 | Ga. | 1847
By the Court
delivering the opinion.
This case'comes'before us on a bill of exceptions and writ of error from the Superior Court of the County of Houston.
It apppears from the record, that a judgment was obtained in the SuperiorCourt of Jones County,in favour of Tattnall Booth, against Jeremiah M. Williams, on the 30th day of October, 1824. On the 20th day of January, 1825, the Deputy Sheriff made a return thereon of “ no property to he found.” On the 2d day of August, 1829, there was another return made on the execution, by the proper officer, of “ no property to be found, whereon to levy this fi.fa.” There was no other entry made on it until the first of November, 1846, a period of more than seventeen years. The question made in the Court below was, whether this execution was dormant within the provisions of the Acts of 1822 and 1823.
The Court below decided that the execution was dormant, within the true intent and meaning of those Acts, and that an entry should be made by the proper officer every seven years; and that an entry made on the execution within seven years from the date of the judgment, was not sufficient to keep it alive. To which decision the plaintiff in error excepted, and now assigns the same for error in this Court.
- By the common law, executions were required to he sued out within .a year and a day after entering the judgment, otherwise the
As the law stood up to the- time of the enactment of the
The plaintiff in error contends that the entry made on the execution by the proper officer, on the 2d August, 1829, (the same being made within seven years from the date of the judgment) is a compliance with the statute, and will keep the execution alive
Are not the rights of innocent purchasers, and vigilant Iona fide creditors, as much affected by an execution which has an entry made on it within seven years from the date of the judgment, and then permitted to remain dormant for seven years from the date of the last entry on it by the proper officer ? Is it not a dormant execution, within the reason, spirit, and intention of the Legislature ? Such an execution, in our judgment, is fully within the mischief contemplated by the Legislature in the enactment of the statute. Being a statute for the prevention of fraud, it ought to receive a liberal construction, such a construction as will suppress the mischief and advance the remedy which the Legislature intended
Blackstone gives a few instances in his Commentaries. When a law of Edward III forbade all ecclesiastical persons to purchase provisions at Rome, it might seem to prohibit the buying of grain, and other victuals; but when it was considered that the statute was made to repress the usurpations of the Papal See, and that the nominations to thebenefices by the Pope were esü.edp7-ovisions,\t was held, that the restraint was intended to be laid on such provisions only.
So where a law enacted that whoever drew blood in the streets, should be punished with the utmost severity, it was held not to extend to the Surgeon who opened tl^e vein of a person who fell down in the street with a fit.
Where there was a law that those who in a storm forsook the ship should forfeit all property therein, and that the ship and lading should belong entirely to those who staid in it, in a dangerous tempest all the mariners forsook the ship except only one sick passenger, who, by reason of his disease, was unable to get out and escape. By chance the ship came safe to port, the sick man kept possession, and claimed the benefit of the law. 1 Black. Com. 61. Now this sick man was within the letter of the law, but not within the reason or spirit of it. The reason for making the law was, to give encouragement to such as should venture their lives to save the vessel; but the sick passenger neither staid in the ship on that account, nor contributed any thing to its preservation. The subject matter of a statute, its effects and consequences, as well as the reason and spirit of it, are to be taken into consideration. The contemporaneous, construction given to this statute by the Judges in Convention, was the same which we now give to it. Stone vs. Head et al. Dudley’s R. 166. Did we entertain any doubts as to the construction to be given to this statute, we should very reluctantly overrule the construction given to it by the Judges in Convention, under which important rights to property may have vested, and which ought not to be disturbed upon doubtful questions. Let the judgment of the Court below be affirmed.