Boyer v. Northern Central Railway Co.

1 Pears. 113
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County
DecidedDecember 26, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pears. 113 (Boyer v. Northern Central Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyer v. Northern Central Railway Co., 1 Pears. 113 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court.

On an assessment of damages made by viewers in favor of the plaintiff above named, judgment was entered by the court, October 10th, 1857. On the 10th of November, following, a fi. fa. was issued on the judgment, and property of defendant levied on. On November 12th, on security for the debt being entered, the execution was stayed, and an order made to suspend all further process for one year,, from October 13th, 1857. On November 17th, a motion was made by plaintiff’s counsel to rescind the order on three distinct grounds. 1. The defendant, being a corporation, does not come within section 6 of the act of October 13th, 1857. 2. It has already enjoyed the [114]*114benefit of the stay of execution. 3. The application was not made, and security entered in time. None of the acts of Assembly heretofore in force in this State gave a stay of execution to corporations. Though not excluded from their operation by name, yet they are by the clearest implication. The act of March 24th, 1806 (4 Smith's Laws, 429) is the prototype of that of June 14th, 1836 (Dunlop, 809). From the former the latter law was framed. They both give the stay for certain periods of time, if tire defendant is possessed of a freehold to a certain amount clear of all incumbrances; but if he is not, execution may issue forthwith, unless security in the nature of special bail is given. On that being done, a stay is secured for thirty days, and for a further time on giving security for debt, etc. A corporation can by no possibility enter special bail, nor security of that nature. It cannot be surrendered, which is essential to the character of special bail. Hence, without any express words, it is excluded from tire benefit of both of our general laws on the subject, and always has been. The words of the acts are applicable to individuals in their natural capacity alone, and not to artificial persons. Did the legislature intend to change the system by section 6 of the act of October 13th, 1857 ? All the words of that section seem rather to apply to natural than to artificial persons. In fact, some expressions are wholly inapplicable to corporations. It says: If the defendant shall be possessed of any estate in fee simple, within the respective county,” worth, etc., “ over and above all incumbrances, and the amount exempt from levy and sale on execution, he shall be entitled to a stay, etc.” Now it is well known that no portion of the property of a corporation is exempt from levy and sale; of course, it could not have been within the contemplation of the legislature. The expression tends as strongly to show the meaning of the law-making power, as the provision for entering special bail under the acts of 1806 and 1836; both of which have always been construed to be inapplicable to corporations. The words of the act of 1857 are very general ; but their whole tenor seems applicable to the case of natural persons. Yet, without the provision referred to, we might be unable to exclude corporations; but those words, in our opinion, show clearly that it was the intention to embrace only those persons, who, as a class, could claim the exemption of a portion of their effects from execution. It may be supposed that, as the general scope and object of the act was to furnish relief to a certain class of corporations, the banks of the State; and as they were by this section precluded from collecting the debts due them for one year, a similar indulgence was intended to be extended to, them; and if they are embraced within this section, all other corporations would be as a necessary consequence. We did not find in any portion of the act a disposition to relieve that class of corporations from their common-law responsibility to pay them debts; but [115]*115merely to exonerate them from the penalties and forfeitures imposed by other statutes. The common-law- remedy by recovery of a judgment, execution, and sale of property remains as before this act was passed. It is not the policy or duty of the courts to take it away, unless the legislature had clearly so provided. We believe that the remedy upon contracts should not be disturbed, but remain as, heretofore. The order staying the proceedings for one year, was improvidently made in this case, and must be rescinded. The security given was not authorized by law, and the recognizance to secure the debt must be discharged. As this order is decisive of the case for the present, it might be considered unnecessary for the court to express any opinion on the other points; but as the question may come before the Supreme Court on a writ of error, we will give our views on those also. Section 11 of the act of February 19th, 1849, under which the damages were assessed in this case, provides that after confirmation of the report of viewers, judgment shall be entered thereon; and if the amount thereof be not paid within thirty days after the entry of such judgment, execution may issue, etc. Is this such a stay of execution as is contemplated by the proviso to section 6 of the act of October 13th, 1857 ? . That it is a cesset executio for thirty days, there can be no doubt; but is it given for the purpose for which stays are allowed by our laws to enable the defendant to raise the money with less inconvenience ? In all other laws enacted for the purpose of giving a cesset, the time is scaled by the amount of the judgment; here it is the same, whether the sum be ten dollars or ton thousand. In the other cases it depended on the safety of the debt by it being a lien on freehold estate, or security given for payment. Here no execution can issue, whether the defendant owns any freehold, or is insolvent. Under the other laws the stay must be claimed by the defendant; here it is made part of the conditions of the judgment. To me it seems rather in the nature of that kind of suspension of execution, which is given on judgments rendered on special verdicts or cases stated, to enable the party to sue out a writ of error. It is a condition annexed to the judgment rendered in a summary proceeding out of the course of the common law, and need not be claimed by the defendant. Therefore, it is not taken, as provided in the act of 1857, but is conferred, probably, to enable the railroad company to sue out a writ of error. Had the law been then, as it is now, we should say it was to give the party time to enter an appeal, and claim the trial by jury; but as that provision did not then exist, it cannot aid us in interpreting the statute. If necessary, we shall decide that the defendant has not taken the stay of execution, and is not precluded from claiming it by the proviso.

The question of time is the last point for consideration. The act of Assembly was passed October 13th, 1857. The security [116]*116was entered, and stay of execution claimed November 12th. If one day is to be computed as inclusive, and the other as exclusive, this is within the time prescribed by law. If both days are to be taken as inclusive, the defendant is one day too late. Section 6 of the act of Assembly, gives a stay on judgments now obtained, or to be obtained on suits now brought, for the time of one year from the date of the passage of this act, and on all others for one year, to be computed from the first day of the term to which the action was commenced. And every defendant in such judgment may have the same stay of execution thereon, if within thirty days from the passage of this act, or within thirty days from the rendition of any future judgment, he shall give security, etc.” As early as 1815, an act of Assembly, worded substantially like the present, received a judicial construction from the Supreme Court of this State (Sines v. Hampton, 1 S.

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1 Pears. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyer-v-northern-central-railway-co-pactcompldauphi-1857.