9 N.H. 59 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1837
This action is founded upon the remedial pro
The 3d section of the act of 1820 provides, “ that if any per- ‘ son or persons, entitled to fees under the act, shall demand ‘ and take any greater fee or fees for any of the services men- ‘ tioned in the act, than is therein and thereby provided and ! declared, he or they shall forfeit and pay to the person or ‘persons suing for the same, the sum of thirty dollars for 1 every such offence.” And the 4th section provides, that the mode of process for the recovery of damages which may accrue for offences committed under the act, may be by action of debt, or by complaint to the grand jury for the county in which the offence was committed; but in case of prosecutions under this act by complaint to the grand jury, the penalty which may be recovered shall be for the use of the county in which the offence was committed.
The act of July 2d, 1831, is an act in addition to the act regulating fees, and provides “that the persons entitled to ‘ receive fees under any of the provisions of said act, shall, ‘ on receiving such fees, if required by the person paying such * fees, make out and deliver unto him a particular statement £ of the items of such services, with the sum or sums de~ £ manded and received therefor, and shall receipt the same ; ! and if any of the persons entitled to receive such fees shall ‘ knowingly and wilfully demand and receive any more Or ‘ greater fees for any services by them performed, than is al- ‘ lowed them by law, they shall forfeit and pay the sum of 1 fifty dollars for every such offence, to be sued for and reeov- ‘ ered by the person injured, in the same way and manner as ‘is provided by the act to which this is an amendment.”
It seems clearly to have been the design of the legislature to revise the penal sections of the act of 1820, and to provide surer means to enforce the penalty for the taking of ille
In the case Bartlett al. vs. King, 12 Mass. 545, it is said that a subsequent statute, revising the whole subject matter of a former one, and evidently intended as a substitute for it, although it contains no express words to that effect, .must, on the principles of law, as well as in reason and common sense, operate to repeal the former.
In the case of The King vs. Cator, 4 Burr. 2026, it was decided that a former statute, inflicting a penalty of £100 and three months’ imprisonment on persons enticing away artificers, was virtually repealed by a subsequent statute, inflicting £500 penalty and twelve months’imprisonment for the same offence. The same principle is adopted in the case of The King vs. Davis, 1 Leach’s cases 306.
Nichols vs. Squire, 5 Pick. 168, is a similar case. There, by the statute of 1817, the selling of tickets in any lottery not granted or permitted by the commonwealth, was prohibited under a new penalty; and it was holden by the court, “ that ivhere the legislature impose a second penalty for an offence, whether smaller or larger than the former one, a party cannot be allowed to sue on one, or the other, at his option, and that the original act is repealed by implication.”
Under the statute of 1831, the penalty for taking illegal fees is increased from thirty to fifty dollars, and this penalty is to be collected only by the person injured; while, under the former act, any person suing for the same was entitled to the penalty. The remedy in other respects is to be pursued in the same way and manner as is provided in the original act; that is, either by action of debt, or by complaint to the grand jury for the county in which the offence was committed, when the increased penalty would go for the use of the county.
The provisions of this act, then, so far as they go to fix
Judgment entered for the defendant.