83 Vt. 201 | Vt. | 1910
The action is general assumpsit and was brought to Washington County Court. The writ, following the statutory form, notified the defendants to appear before said court and to cause their appearance to be entered with the clerk on of before the expiration of forty-two days from the date of the writ. The writ was dated March 4, 1909. Five days thereafter, that is March 9, 1909, a regular term of Washington County Court was opened. The forty-two days within which the defendants were required to appear, and within which they in fact did appear, expired April 15, 1909. On that day the March term of court had not completed the business of its session and so had not been adjourned. Final adjournment was had eight days thereafter, that is April 23, 1909. At the following September term the defendants asked leave to file a declaration on book in set-off, and the court, as matter of discretion, granted such leave. The plaintiff excepted. The plaintiff then filed a motion to dismiss the declaration in set-off on the ground that it had not been filed during the first term of court in which the defendants were required to appear. This motion was overruled and the defendants excepted. The court then rendered judgment to account, and ruled that an auditor be appointed. The plaintiff again excepted. The plaintiff’s exceptions were allowed and the case was passed to this Court before trial.
Section 1520 of the Public Statutes is this: "If the defendant in an action in the county court has a demand on book against the plaintiff, such defendant, during the first term of the court in which he is required to appear, may file a declaration in such court, setting forth the nature of such demand,
It is claimed, on the part of the plaintiff, that the term at which the declaration in set-off was filed was not the first term at which the defendant was required to appear, and that it was not within the discretion of the court to allow it to be filed at the September term. The statute, above referred to, was enacted in substantially its present form in 1797, and for about a hundred years the law and the plaintiff’s writ required a defendant to appear in court at a stated term to be begun and holden on a day fixed. However, by recent legislation the appearance of a defendant, except in cases specially provided for, has no reference to terms of court but is to be entered with the clerk cn or before the expiration of forty-two days from the date of the writ. The statute providing for a declaration in set-off on book account has, however, taken no note of the changed practice, and hence the question before us has arisen. But the right to declare on book by way of set-off remains unimpaired, and the circumstance that the March term, 1909, of Washington County court, had not in fact expired upon the expiration of forty-two days from the date of the writ in question did not put it beyond the discretion of the court, at the September term following, to allow the declaration in set-off to be filed. Regard cannot be had to the very letter of the statute, for a defendant is not now required to appear at any term of court, and it is now commonly the ease that his appearance is entered and is required to be entered in vacation. Reasonable regard must be had to the spirit of the statute, for statutes of set-off are favored in law, since they confer just benefits upon- both plaintiff and defendant in simplifying litigation, and since they lessen the danger that a plaintiff who is insolvent or “execution proof” may recover an enforceable judgment and leave his adversary to the recovery 'of a worthless one. N. Chip. 170, 171. The injustice of the common law in not allowing one debt to be set off against another was glaring. Babbington on Set-Off and Mutual Credit, 1. It shocked “the natural sense of mankind,” as was said by Lord Mansfield in Green v. Farmer, 4 Burr. 2221. Where there are mutual credits between two persons each of them being debtor
Judgment affirmed and cause remanded.