27 Mo. 442 | Mo. | 1858
delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was brought on the 10th September, 1856, on a cause of action alleged to have accrued on the 14th September, 1855. The forty-second section of the act concerning boats and vessels, in force when this suit was brought, required all suits upon liens given by the act, except those enumerated in the first class (of which this was not one), to be commenced (in St. Louis county) within six months. Before this law took effect, twelve months were allowed for suits of this character. The question is, whether the forty-second section of the act of 1856 applied to this case.
It is very clear that if this was an ordinary civil action and not one for a penalty, it was not barred, because it is not necessary in order to give reasonable effect to the statute of 1856 to give it any retrospective operation. As the statute did not prescribe any time within which suits upon past causes of action and not then barred by any existing statute should be barred, the reasonable intendment must govern that the act was designed to be entirely prospective, and was not intended to cut off causes of action which were not then barred by previous statutes. Any other construction would lead to suits clearly not contemplated by the legislature, and which, if foreseen, would of course have been provided for. On the last day of April, the day before the revised code of 1856 took effect, Ridgley had a cause of action which was not barred by any statute then in force. On the contrary, he had until the 14th of September, 1856, within which to bring his suit. If the revision of 1856 and the forty-second section be applied to this case, his remedy was not merely affected, but it was entirely cut off, for the six months had entirely expired. This was evidently not the intention of the law. Where the legislature intend to legislate upon past causes of action, as they may do in the opinion of some, they would of course give a reasonable time after the passage of the act within which to bring suits upon them.
These observations are made upon the assumption that there
The cases of Field and Cathcart v. Mason, 8 Mo. 687, and Webb v. Coonce, 11 Mo. 10, are sufficient to show that the refusal of the court below to set aside the default was not such an unwarrantable or improper exercise of his discretion as to -justify the interference of this court. There was certainly negligence of the party, if not of his attorney; for the writ advised him in what court the suit was brought, and he gave a bond for the boat in which the same thing is recited.
It"is objected that the inquiry of damages was executed at the return term of the writ. The twenty-ninth section of the
Judgment affirmed ;