Maxson v. Annas

1 Denio 204 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1845

By the Court, Bronson, Ch. J.

The plaintiff insists that the judgment under which the defendant purchased the property is void, because it was rendered on Saturday; and he relies on the statute “ in relation to the seventh day baptists.” This badly drawn law provides, in substance, that no writ, process, warrant, order, judgment, decree, or other proceeding of any court, shall be served or executed on the seventh day of the week, commonly called Saturday, upon any person who keeps that day as the sabbath. Cases of breaches of the peace, and the apprehension of persons charged with crimes and misdemeanors are excepted. “ The service of any such proceeding, in all other cases, shall oe utterly void.” (Stat. 1839, p. 335.) This statute, except as to the day, is much like the one which provides, that no writ, process, <fcc. shall be served or executed on Sunday; (1 R. S. 675, § 69:) and both should receive the same construction. But I am unable to read the law so that it will touch the plaintiff’s case. His complaint is, that the judgment was rendered—■ *206not that -it was served or executed”—on Saturday. The rendition, is a very different thing from the execution, of a judgment. We have been referred to two classes of cases: one relating to ministerial, and the other to judicial acts. The first class arose under the Sunday statute ; the second had nothing to do with it. In Butler v. Kelsey, (15 John. 177,) which belongs to the first class, it was held that a writ of inquiry of damages could not be executed on Sunday. It was a plain case, falling within the very words' of the statute. In Field v. Park, (20 John. 140,) it was held, that a notice of motion is, in effect, a summons to appear in court and defend against an order to be applied for; and cannot, therefore, be served on Sunday. Van Vechten v. Paddock, (12 John. 178,) decides, that delivering process to an officer on Sunday, is not a good commencement of an action on that day. The cases of the other class hold, that, at the common lato, Sunday is dies non juridicus, and that a judgment cannot be rendered, or an award be. made on that day. (Hotailing v. Osborn, 15 John. 119; Story v. Elliott, 8 Cowen, 27.) We have now a statute declaring, that “ no court shall be opened, or transact any business, on Sunday, unless it be for the purpose of receiving a verdict, or discharging a jury.” (2 R. S. 275, § 7.) We have no such statute in relation to Saturday; nor has the common law.decided that Saturday is not a judicial day. No act is void because it-was done on the sabbath, unless it has been prohibited by the common law, or by statute. (Sayles v. Smith, 12 Wend. 57.) The same doctrine must apply to all the other days in the week. •

If the "plaintiff had the process made returnable at a time when he knew the defendant could not conscientiously attend to make his defence, he is worthy of-the severest censure. But still the judgment is not void. There are many social duties Avhich are not enforced, and many wicked deeds which are not punished, by human laAvs.

New trial, denied.