56 S.C. 56 | S.C. | 1899
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Plaintiffs commenced an action against defendant in the Court of Common Pleas for Marion County, in this State, by the service of a summons and complaint upon him while he was at Florence C. H., in Florence County, in this State, bn the 6th day of July, 1898, for the recovery of a money judgment. Thereupon the defendant, by his counsel, served the following notice: “The defendant, James Norton, by his counsel, Sellers & Sellers, without at present answering the complaint herein, alleges: 1. That he is a representative from, the Sixth District of the State of South Carolina in the Congress of the United States of America; that, as such, he is not amenable to process, either criminal or civil, except in specified cases, during the session of the said Congress, or in going to> or returning from the same. 2. That on the 6th day of July, 1898 (the day on which copy of summons and complaint was served upon him, in the town of Florence, S. C), the said Congress was in session in the city of Washington, D. C., he being absent therefrom on leave. Wherefore, you will take notice that
The motion being heard, his Honor, the presiding Judge, passed the following order: “The motion made in above case to set aside the service of the summons and complaint, on the grounds set forth in the notice served upon plaintiff’s counsel, 25th July, 1898, having been -heard, and after argument of counsel, it is ordered, that the service of said summons and complaint be set aside as illegal and void, it being admitted that Congress was in session, and that James Norton was a member thereof, and absent therefrom on leave.”
The plaintiffs, through their counsel,- gave due notice of appeal and subsequently filed their exceptions, as follows: “It is submitted that his Honor, the Circuit Judge, erred: 1. In dismissing the service of the summons and.complaint, and in holding the same to be illegal and vo-id, on the ground that ‘Congress was in session, and that James Norton was a member thereof, and absent therefrom on leave.’ 2. In not holding that the service of the summons and complaint was legal and valid, because the same was not an arrest, and the defendant was neither in attendance -upon Congress nor going to or returning from the same. 3. In not holding that representatives in Congress, are privileged solely from arrest, except- in treason, felony .and breach of the peace, during their attendance upon Congress while in session, and
The language of the Federal Constitution is as follows: Art. I., sec. 6: “The senators and representatives shall .receive a compensation for their services, to be ascertained by law and paid out of the treasury of the United States. They shall in all cases, except treason, felony and breach of the peace, be privileged fr.om arrest during their attendance at the session of their respective houses, and in going to and returning from the same; and for any speech or debate in an)'- house they shall not be questioned at any other place.” Of course, the question we are called upon to settle depends upon the meaning to be given to the words “privileged from arrest.” If we adhere to the literal meaning of the word “arrest,” the Circuit Judge was in error. But is such a restricted meaning proper? In the judgment of the writer of this opinion, the words “privileged from .arrest;” • as used in the Federal Constitution, are words of art,, meaning freedom from service of any civil process. These are the words of the common law and of the mother country. It is to be regretted, that the Supreme Court of the United States has not spoken in regard to the true meaning to be accorded the words “privileged from arrest.” In our own State, in the case of Tillinghast and Arthur v. Thomas Carr, 4 McCord, 152, when the privilege of a member of the House of Representatives of the State of South Carolina. was invaded by a summons in a civil proceeding, the Court held that the language of the 14th section of article.I. of the State Constitution, which was in these words: “The members of. both houses shall be protected in their persons and estates, during their attendance on, going to, and returning from. the legislature, and ten days previous to the sitting and ten days after the adjournment of the legislature; but these privileges shall not be extended so as to protect any member who -shall be charged with treason, felony or breach of the peace,”
Hence it is my duty to state that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the cause remanded to- the Circuit Court, with leave to the defendant to answer in twenty days after the remittitur reaches the Court below; but that in the event the defendant fails to- answer in said twenty 'days, that the plaintiff have leave to apply to- the Court for judgment, but I dissent from this judgment. ■
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting,
Being unable to accept the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice Pope in this case, I will proceed to state briefly the grounds of my dissent. The facts of the case are all conceded, and are so- fully and fairly stated in his opinion, as to supersede the necessity of any further statement here. The exception claimed is based entirely upon sec. 6 of art. I. of the Constitution of the United States, the terms of which are set forth in the leading opinion. I do not think that the defendant is entitled to the exemption claimed, for two reasons: ist. Because it is not pretended that the defendant was arrested, but was simply served with a summons to answer to a civil action brought to recover the amount of an ordinary money demand; and the constitutional provision above referred to confers only the privilege of immunity from arrest and not an immunity from suit. 2d. Because it is conceded that the defendant, at the time he was served with the summons, was not in attendance upon the session of the House of Representatives of which he ivas a member, nor was he going to or returning from the same; but, on the contrary, he was absent on leave from said house, and was at Florence, S. C., attending to his own private .business. The question which the Court is called upon to decide turns entirely upon the construction of the language used in the constitutional provision under which the exemption is claimed. The language is that senators and representatives “shall, in all cases, except treason, felony and breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest.” It seems to me that this language is so plain as to admit of but one construction. The privilege granted .is freedom from “arrest ” and that word has such a plain and well defined meaning that there can be no doubt as to the meaning of such a well known word! having such a well defined meaning. There is not a word or syllable in the section of the Constitution, which in the slightest degree' indicates an - intention that this word shall have any other than its universally accepted signification. No Court, therefore, has any
The only case from ®ur own State cited by Mr. Justice Pope is Tillinghast & Arthur v. Carr, 4 McC., 152, which, it seems to me, tends to support my view rather than his. In that case, Carr, a member of the legislature, was served with a writ while attending the legislature in Columbia, and he moved to set aside the service of the writ, under the privilege conferred by our Constitution of 1790, which motion was granted. The language of that provision, which is fully set out in the opinion of Mr. Justice Pope, and need not, therefore, be repeated here, is very different from that relied on in this case. The exception-there conferred is expressed in this language: “The members of both houses shall be protected in their persons and estates, during their attendance,” &c. (italics mine), and that language might well be construed as extending the exemption so as to- embrace immunity from suit as well as from arrest, for the protection intended applied not only to- the persons of the members, but also to their estates, which, of course, would be affected by a civil suit, as well as where the person of the member was arrested; and hence, when the declared intention was to- protect not o-nly the person but also the estate of the member, the Court was well warranted in construing the constitutional provision as conferring an immunity from the service of any civil process as well as from the arrest of his person in a civil action. This view seems to have been taken by Judge Co-lcoek, who- -opens his opinion with these words: “In determining this question I must be governed by the words of our Constitution. It will be observed that all cases of privileges are now provided for by some law, and in most of those which have been passed upon that subject, both here and in Great Britain (before the act o-f Anne), the word arrest is used; and this construction, which has been almost always given to that word, has been, that if the body be not
In preparing this opinion, which I have had to do' hastily, I have not had any access to the cases cited from Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and the Federal Reporter, and, therefore, I cannot comment upon them except to say that, judging from
2d. There is also another reason why I cannot concur in the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice Pope, even if it could be conceded (as I am unwilling to' doj, that the word “arrest,” in the constitutional provision relied upon, xould be so construed as' to include an exemption from the service of a summons in a civil action, still I do not see how the exemption claimed in this case could he allowed. It will be observed that the privilege conferred is not an exemption from arrest while a member of Congress or during the sessions of that body, as we are told by the books was once the case in regard to members of the British Parliament, but the exemption here is only during attendance at the session of the house of which the person claiming the exemption is a member, and in going to or returning from the same. Now in this case the conceded facts are that the defendant, when served with a copy of the summons in this case, was neither in attendance on nor was he going to or returning from the house of representatives of which he was a member, büt, on the contrary, was in the city of Florence on his private business. So that in no view of the case was the defendant entitled to the exemption claimed.
I think, therefore, the' order appealed from should be reversed.