45 Me. 72 | Me. | 1858
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
The principal question presented, is, whether a horse of the value of one hundred and fifty dollars, the property of a debtor, owning at the same time no working cattle or other horse, is exempted from attachment and execution under the twelfth clause of section 36, of c. 81, of R. S. of 1857, which provides, that, “ One pair of working cattle, or, instead thereof, one or two horses not exceeding in value one hundred dollars,” shall be so exempted, and, “if he has more than one pair of working cattle, or, if the two horses exceed in value one hundred dollars, he may elect which pair of cattle, or which of the horses shall be exempted.”
The plaintiff’s counsel contends, that the one horse may be of a value unlimited, and that the two horses only must not exceed in value, one hundred dollars. While the defendant’s
If the clause read, one horse not exceeding in value one hundred dollars, or two horses not exceeding in value the same sum; then, upon this point, there could be no disagreement, the language would be too plain to admit of controversy, and we think such to be its true construction, although less concise than that used in the statute. If any doubts can be entertained upon this subject, we are authorized to look at the law as it was before the recent revision of the statutes, for, say the Court, in Taylor v. Delaney, 2 Caine’s Ca. in Er., 151, “when the law, antecedently to the revision, was settled, either by clear expressions in the statutes, or adjudications on them, the more change of phraseology shall not be deemed a change of the law, unless such phraseology evidently purports an intention in the Legislature to work a change.” Our statute, embracing the exemption of horses, was first enacted in 1847, c. 32, § 2, which is in these words: — “ Any person may keep one or two horses,” &c., “ provided the said horse or horses shall not exceed in all, the value of one hundred dollars.”
The principal design, in the revision of 1857, was “to revise, collate, and arrange all the public laws of the State,” and, in revising, to condense as far as practicable, “ with indications of such new laws as might be deemed suitable and necessary,” and, on examination of the commissioners’ report, we perceive no indications of any change in this particular.
But the counsel for the plaintiff further contends, that he is aided in his construction, by the latter part of the clause, viz., “ if the two horses exceed in value one hundred dollars, he may elect which of the horses shall be exemptedand he virtually argues, that the debtor may keep one horse, irrespective of his value, because, if he have two horses of the value of five hundred dollars, then, inasmuch as they exceed in value one hundred dollars, he may elect the one worth four
•. Upon the second point, raised by the plaintiff’s counsel, we are satisfied that the value was descriptive, and that a horse worth one hundred and fifty dollars is not the horse exempted by the statute.
According to the agreement of the parties,
A nonsuit is to be entered.