Atwood v. Buckingham

62 A. 616, 78 Conn. 423, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 62 A. 616 (Atwood v. Buckingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atwood v. Buckingham, 62 A. 616, 78 Conn. 423, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 105 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiff in May, 1904, brought his action to recover $240 as the forfeiture provided by § 324 of the General Statutes, claimed to have been incurred by the defendant, as an administratrix, through her unexcused failure, for the twelve months prior to the bringing of the ac *424 'tion, to file an inventory as provided by law. While the action was pending the General Assembly, by an Act which was approved and went into effect on June 21st, 1905, repealed said section. Public Acts of 1905, Chap. 160. Later in the session, by another Act which was approved and went into effect July 6th, 1905, it was enacted that “ in all civil actions pending in the courts of the state, brought under section 824 of the general statutes for recovery of the forfeiture therein provided, such recovery shall be for the sum one dollar only as the forfeiture for such neglect and the taxable costs of court.” The Act further provided that the defendant might before trial tender to the plaintiff the sum of $1 and accrued costs, and that upon the plaintiff’s refusal to accept the same he should not recover any sum in excess thereof. Public Acts of 1905, Chap. 217. The defendant thereupon filed an answer in which she set up a tender of the sum of $1 and the amount of taxable costs then accrued. To this answer the plaintiff demurred, and assigned as grounds of demurrer various reasons involving the construction and effect of the two Acts of 1905 referred to, and the constitutionality of the one under which the tender was made and pleaded. The court overruled the demurrer and, the plaintiff refusing to plead further, rendered judgment that the plaintiff recover the amount of the tender. Of this action he complains.

Section 1 of the General Statutes provides, among other things, that the repeal of an Act shall not affect any suit, or prosecution, or proceeding pending at the time of the repeal, for an offense committed, or for the recovery of a penalty or forfeiture incurred under the Act repealed ; and that the passage or repeal of an Act should not affect any action then pending. The repeal of said § 324 did not, therefore, affect the plaintiff’s action, or any other which may have been pending under said section; and this the defendant concedes.

The repeal, however, was effectual not only to prevent the institution of new actions for future delinquencies, but also to prevent the bringing of such actions for past ones. *425 The plaintiff has erroneously assumed the contrary to be the situation as respects neglects which antedated the repeal. It is the well-settled rule that, in the absence of a saving clause or statute, the right to bring suit to recover a penalty or forfeiture falls with the Act which provides it. Yeaton v. United States, 5 Cranch (U. S.) 281; Maryland v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 8 How. (U. S.) 534; Norris v. Crocker, 13 id. 429; Welch v. Wadsworth, 30 Conn. 149. There was no saving clause in the present repealing Act. Section 1 of the General Statutes contains the general provision that the repeal of an Act shall not affect any punishment, penalty, or forfeiture incurred before the repeal takes effect. But no penalty or forfeiture could by any possibility be incurred under the repealed A ct by any delinquent before suit was in fact instituted, for the all-sufficient reason, if for no other, that the section expressly provides that there should be no forfeiture incurred in any case where the delinquent, before suit is brought, makes to the Court of Probate an acceptable excuse for his delay. The absence of this excuse at the moment suit is brought is thus made one of the conditions of forfeiture. This the plaintiff recognized when he framed his complaint, which averred the absence of an accepted excuse. By reason of this condition, no incurred forfeiture was possible under the Act until the status of the party against whom a forfeiture was sought to be enforced was, by the bringing of an action, fixed as that of a delinquent subject to the statutory penalty. When, therefore, the repeal took effect, there was an end to all situations which could furnish the basis o£ new actions. Persons who had escaped suit might be in neglect, but none of them had as yet become subject to the penalty of the statute, and it could not then have been foretold that any one of them would ever become so had the statute continued in force.

The plaintiff contends that said chapter 217, which is the Act which reduces the amount of the forfeiture and under which the tender .was made, should be given a prospective application only, and not made to retroact upon actions already brought. In aid of this contention it is said, *426 and well said, that the presumption is that statutes are intended to operate prospectively, and that they should not be construed as having a retrospective effect unless * their terms show clearly and unmistakably a legislative intention that they should so operate. Thames Mfg. Co. v. Lathrop, 7 Conn. 550; Plumb v. Sawyer, 21 id. 351, 355; Smith v. Lyon, 44 id. 175; Middletown v. New York, N. H. & H. R. Co., 62 id. 492.

With respect to the present Act, however, it-is to be observed that to confine its operation to suits to be brought is to deny it all operation whatsoever. Its subject-matter is expressed to be “ all civil actions pending in the courts of the state, brought under section 324 of the general statutes.” We have already seen that the only actions which could by any possibility ever be or become pending under that Act were those which were pending at its repeal, which antedated the enactment of chapter 217. The legislature must therefore have meant by pending actions those actions or none at all. Furthermore, if chapter 217 be read in connection with chapter 160, as it should be, it will be clearly seen that by the two Acts the General Assembly at its session in 1905 undertook to deal with the whole situation presented by litigation, actual or possible, which might arise under said § 324. In the first it was sought to prevent all new actions: by the second to deal with those which had been begun. These considerations, when taken in connection with the natural meaning of the language employed in chapter 217, leave no room for doubt as to the legislative intent, and that the legislative command was thereby expressly given that the right of recovery in all actions then pending under § 324 should be controlled and limited as therein provided. In the presence of this express command, the saving clauses contained in § 1 of the General Statutes, which have been already noticed, of course become ineffective. They are but legislative enactments and must yield to the later expression of the legislative will.

The plaintiff next claims that in so far as chapter 217 professes to operate upon actions pending at the time of its *427 enactment it is unconstitutional.

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Bluebook (online)
62 A. 616, 78 Conn. 423, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atwood-v-buckingham-conn-1905.