6 N.H. 374 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1833
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendants contend that they are not liable in this action, because there has been no breach of the condition of the bond upon which the action is
The debtors, Hutchins and Knight, having been duly committed to prison, and having after the execution of this bond, gone at large, without the limits, the plaintiff will be entitled to recover, in this case, unless those proceedings have been in due form, and unless the oath prescribed by the statute, was duly and properly administered to the said Hutchins and Knight, on the 23d day of May, 1833.
The statute provides, that any person committed upon, execution, may make application, as therein directed, and pray to be admitted to the oath there prescribed, and that “ either of the justices or commissioners to whom application shall be so made, may make an order on such application, appointing a time and place, when and where said application will be taken into consideration ; and the debtor shall cause the creditor, or his attorney, to be served with a copy of such application, and order of notice thereon, at least fifteen days before the day appointed for such hearing.”
There is a further provision, that if one of the justices, or commissioners, to whom application is made, is necessarily absent, the justices or commissioners attending, “ on receiving satisfactory evidence that due notice has been given to the creditor,” may postpone the hearing.
And it is enacted, that in case the justices or commissioners shall administer the oath to the debtor, they shall make a certificate of the oath, in the form prescribed in the act, in which it is to be certified, that the debt- or, (or his attorney) having been duly notified, did, (or did not) attend, &c.
The plaintiff’s counsel has urged three objections to the proceedings relied upon, to sustain this defence.
It is contended that there is no sufficient evidence in the case that any notice whatever, was served upon the plaintiff, or his attorney.
It does not appear that Thitodl ■ r ..¡, wf •'*■ du’\ qualified to serve and return j ’i„o' • i there . ’ y u r tiilcate before us, showing ti i C i> ’f >n’„ ;r t th of that return. It is not renuRne t1 a: ^ wh nr _e -mead be served by an officer ; but il n;t e<; »y -u.y od.er in..* vidual, it is undoubtedly prnpei tl at ra athdaMc c < th.., fact should be made, and if d is rc.oin \.c- t Í d»e affi-dence furnished by the siriement. we &1 a ;M hoVt dm mere certificate of the indis ¡du: h unul termed tv oath, to be insufficient.
But the statute evidently contemplates, that evidence upon this point should be furnished to the commissioners, and that they should judge respecting it.
If one of the commissioners is necessarily prevented from attending at the time and place appointed, those attending, on receiving satisfactory evidence that due notice has been given to the creditor, may postpone the hearing, &c.
Here the commissioner, or commissioners present, in case all do not attend, are to receive evidence that notice has been given, and to judge upon that subject.
It is not stated what evidence is to be “ satisfactory,” but undoubtedly the proper evidence, is the return of a sworn officer, or the oath of some individual to the fact.
By the statute, also, where the party is admitted to the oath, the commissioners, in the certificate which they return to the sheriff, or prison-keeper, are to certify the fact that the creditor, or his attorney, has been duly notified-
Of coarse, they are to receive evidence of this fact, and to pass a judgment upon that evidence. It appears that they have found and certified that fact in this case.
We are certainly not to presume, without. proof, tbat the commissioners have made their certificate upon insufficient evidence — and the statute, in requiring them to make such certificate, must have intended that it should have some force and effect, as evidence of the fact.
In Haskell v. Haven, 3 Pick. 406, it is held, that such certificate must be conclusive evidence of the fact, it being by the statute of Massachusetts, the special duty of the magistrates to examine the return — and where it is made their duty to certify the fact, as in this case, and where it is of course their duty first to investigate the subject, it would seem that it should be equally conclusive.
It is not necessary, however, in this case, to decide whether such certificate is here to be deemed conclusive evidence.
If it is held to be prima facie evidence, and there can be no doubt that the legislature must at least have intended to give it effect thus far, there is nothing in the case to counteract or control it — the evidence of the return is consistent with it as far as it goes — and the plaintiff, therefore, has failed of supporting this objection.
Another objection is, that the application sets forth, that said Hutchins and Knight, were imprisoned on an execution which issued in a plea of the case, when in fact the execution in favor of the plaintiff, upon which they stood committed, was issued upon a judgment obtained in an action of trespass.
It is a sufficient answer to this objection, that it was not necessary to state the nature of the action in which the judgment was recovered — and that, although it was started in this case in the application, and a copy of the ap
In an action to charge one as a dormant partner, notice was given him to produce at the trial, the original contract of copartnership, a copy of which purported to be annexed to the notice. The paper annexed differed materially in one particular from the original contract, but the notice was held sufficient to let the plaintiff into parol evidence of such contract, it not being suggested that there was more than one contract of like kind, or that the defendant was surprised. 5 Pick. 18, Bogart v. Brown.
So here, the notice which was served indicated with certainty that Hutchins and Knight were in prison upon an execution of the plaintiff, and had applied to be released from that imprisonment &e. and as there is no pre-tence that there was but one such execution, there could be no misapprehension about it.
The notice was substantially good without this statement, and the mistake being in a particular wholly unessential, and one by which the plaintiff conk! sustain no injury, this objection must be overruled.
The remaining objection is, that the oath was in fact administered before the day appointed for the hearing.
The application was presented on the sixth of May, A. D. 1833, and the order, made upon it the same day, appointed “ Wednesday the twenty-second day of May next” as the time when it would be taken into consideration.
If, as the plaintiff’s counsel contends, the twenty-second day of May, 1834, is the day thereby appointed, all the subsequent proceedings of the commissioners were nugatory and void — and the oath administered by them on the twenty-second of the same May, and their certifi
The question then is, what day was appointed by this order — in other words, is the word “ next” in the sentence, to be referred to the month or the day as its antecedent.
The decisions upon this question have not been uniform. “ Relative words generally are referred to the next antecedent, where the intent upon the whole deed does not appear to the contrary.” Com. Dig. Parols, A, 14.
“But where the intent appears otherwise, the reference shall be to support the intent.”
“ So if an obligation the 23 April, be to pay 24 April next, it shall be referred to the month, or to the day, as the intent is found to be.” Ditto, A, 15.
In Prescott v. -, Cro. Jac. 646. which was debt upon an obligation, dated the first of May, conditioned to pay a sum of money on the fifteenth day of May “ next ensuing,” the question was, whether it should have relation to the month of May next following, and so a year after, or to the same month wherein the bond was made ; and the court were of opinion that it should be referred to the 15th day of the same month.
In Buckley v. Guildbank, Cro. Jac. 678, a special verdict found an agreement made on the 23 May to lend money for a year at legal interest, and the lender took a bond of that date for payment of principal and interest “24 May next ensuing,” and that the scrivener, who drew the obligation, “ by mistaking the said agreement betwixt them, drew it in this manner
The questions were, whether the “ 24th of May next ensuing” should be intended May the twelvemonth after, or the same month of May ? — and then “ if usurious or no ?”
“ Doderidge & Houghton held, that next ensuing shall be intended of the same month of May, which was the next day after, unless the circumstances of the agreement
“ But Lea, Ch. J. held, that next following shall not be referred to May next, unless some matter in the same deed might be shown, and not a collateral agreement found by the jury, nor any collateral deed.”
Where an obligation was made the 17th day of November, and the condition was to pay five pounds the 21st of November following, and five pounds the 20th of December next after, it was holden that the first five pounds ought to be paid the 21st day of November next ensuing, and that it referred to the day, and not to the month.
“ But it hath been lately adjudged, that a bond dated 12 May, with condition to pay a certain sum on the 13th of May next following, should have relation to the month, and not to the day ; for it is said, the month following, as well as the day following, which the present month cannot be, and therefore the money not payable before the 13th of May, come twelvemonth, for these contracts, are to be construed secundam subjectam materiam, and the meaning of the parties.” Kettle v. Jones; 1 Bac. Abr. 669, Conditions, P, 3.
In Bunn v. Thomas, 2 Johns. Rep. 190, the writ was issued 12th May, 1806, and returnable on the 17th day of May next. At February term, 1807, a motion was made to set aside the writ and subsequent proceedings, and it was contended, that as the writ was returnable in May, 1807, it was absolutely void, whereupon the plaintiff’s counsel prayed leave to amend. The court said, “ as a term and more intervened between the teste and return of the writ, it is a mere nullity.”
It seems to have been taken for granted in this last
Tompkins v. Corwin, 9 Cowen, 255, was debt upon a bond for the performance of an award. It appeared that the bond, which was dated the 19th of September, 1825, and conditioned that the award should be made before the 31st of December then next, had been twice altered ■by consent so as to extend the time allowed for making the award.
The last alteration was actually made the 10th of January, and the time extended to the 18th of January.
It was objected, that by the alteration, the bond became a new one, and that the date of the delivery ought to have been set forth, and so a variance.
Sutherland, J, in delivering the opinion, said the objection was to mere matter of form ; “ for admitting the date to have been the 10th of January, it would not change or affect any material allegation in the declaration. The declaration avers that the award, by the terms of the bond, was to be made on or before the 18th day of January next ensuing the date of the bond. It is contended by the defendant’s counsel, that if the date of the bond waa in January, 1828, then the award was not to be made until January, 1827, whereas by the averment in the dedá-lico it was to be made in January, 1826. We have repeatedly held, in similar cases, that the words next, or then next, may be considered as referring to the day of the month, and not the month itself.”
From these cases it appears to be the better opinion, that in a clause like that under consideration, the term “ next” may be referred to the month, or the day, according as the intention of the parties apparent upon the face of the instrument or the subject matter of the transaction, may require ; and if possible such construction should be given as will effectuate the intention of the parties, or give validity to the proceedings.
Whether evidence aliunde may be admitted to explain the intention according to the opinion of Doderidge and Houghton, or whether a construction must be given upon the instrument itself according to the opinion of Lea, Ch. J. may well be left to be settled when a case shall arise which requires it.
It is not necessary here to go beyond the face of the instrument, and the nature of the transaction, to be well assured that neither the magistrates who issued the notice — the debtors who caused it to be served — the attorney of the creditors upon whom it was served — or the creditor himself, if its contents were communicated to him, could have doubted that the time intended as the day of hearing was the twenty-second day of the same month.
The statute required only fifteen days’ notice to be given, and that time intervened between the service of the notice and the 22d of the same month. The service of the notice was on the day immediately following its date ; and it would be difficult to conjecture why an application should have been made, and notice issued at that time, and why service should have been made without delay, if it was intended to have a day of hearing one year and sixteen days from the day of the application.
Besides, the time appointed was Wednesday, the 23d day of May — which well referred to the 22d of May, 1833, but could not have been intended for the 22d of May, 1834, that day being Thursday.
Under these circumstances there can be no reason why a reference should be made which would vitiate the
Judgment for the defendants.