54 N.H. 99 | N.H. | 1873
The decision of tliis case depends upon tlie question, whether a proceeding under the bastardy act is a civil action within the meaning of the Gen. Stats., ch. 215, sec. 1, by which it is provided, that “ civil actions in the supreme court, in which an issue has been joined and judgment rendered, except in cases otherwise provided, and such actions in which judgment has been rendered by agreement of parties open to review, may be once reviewed.”
In Marston v. Jenness, 11 N. H. 156, it was decided that a proceeding under the bastardy act is a civil suit; and in Harris v. County of Sullivan, 15 N. H. 81, this decision was affirmed. In Little v. Dickinson, 29 N. H. 56, it was reaffirmed ; and, in the opinion of the court by Judge Eastman, a bastardy proceeding is variously called a suit, a case, a cause, and an action, and these words are indiscriminately used as synonymous in the General Statutes, and they are synonymous so far as the question before us may be affected. In Stokes v. Sanborn, 45 N. H. 274, 277, it is laid down by Judge Bellows as being settled that bastardy proceedings “ are to be regarded as civil actions.” Indeed, the counsel for the complainant concede that they are civil actions when they say that<£ the true construction of the statute is, that it shall be understood to embrace only civil actions where the proceedings are according to the course of the common law.”
In the opinion of the court in Sheafe v. Sheafe, 29 N. H. 269, this construction is sustained by Judge Woods, whose view was that££ the action must be commenced by writ, and, in fact, must have the characteristics of a common-law action, or it cannot be reviewed.” But the decision of that case was affected by a statutory provision, not now in force, relating to the return of writs of review, and it was unaffected by any statutory provision like that in the Gen. Stats., ch. 215, sec. 10, which allows ££ amendments of the writ, pleadings, or other process upon such review,” apparently recognizing that there may be a review of an action which has no writ; and our conclusion is that this construction is not now the true one. Upon such a construction, the words of the statute ££ except in cases otherwise provided ” would be nearly destitute of force, for the only ££ cases otherwise provided,” which we have been able to discover, are appeals under assignments for the benefit of creditors, ch. 126, sec. 27, appeals from commissioners of insolvent estates, ch. 181, sec. 11, and suits on probate bonds, ch. 187, sec. 17, in but one of which can there be any pretence that the proceedings are according to the course of the common law. Had it been the intention of the legislature which enacted the General Statutes to give a right of review only in civil actions in which the proceedings are according to the course of the common law, it is not only probable that the right would have been thus limited in plain words, but it is quite improbable that reviews would have been expressly prohibited in appeals from assignments for the benefit of creditors and appeals from commissioners of insolvent estates, in which it manifestly could not have been understood that the proceedings are according to the course of the common law.
Our conclusion is supported by a comparison of the present with former statutes. By the act of 1855, “ to remodel the judiciary system,” ch. 1659, sec. 34, actions of review were abolished. By the act of 1859, “ reorganizing the judiciary,” ch. 2211, sec. 5, the right of review was restored in “ all civil actions in which judgment shall be rendered in the supreme court, wherein any issue of fact shall have been joined, except prosecutions for bastardy, appeals from the court of common pleas, justices of the peace and police courts, probate courts, and commissioners of insolvency and suits upon probate bonds.” It will be observed that the legislature deemed it expedient, in enacting this section, to make an express exception of bastardy cases, in order to avoid restoring a right of review in such cases. Subsequently, by