Branch Bank v. Kirkpatrick

5 Ga. 34
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1848
DocketNo. 5
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 Ga. 34 (Branch Bank v. Kirkpatrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Branch Bank v. Kirkpatrick, 5 Ga. 34 (Ga. 1848).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] The single question made in this case is, whether the Act of 1805, which prescribes a limitation to suits, brought upon judg[36]*36merits, other than judgments in our own Courts, is repealed. The Court below decided that it is not repealed, but is still of force; and such is our opinion also. 1

The clause which limits actions upon foreign judgments, is found in the 2d section of the Act of 1805, and is in the following words : “ And the said actions of debt upon judgments, obtained in Courts other than the Courts of this State, within five years next after the judgments shall have been obtained, and not after.” Clayton's Dig. 270.

If this clause be repealed, it must be done by subsequent Acts expressly, or by necessary implication. Wood vs. U. States, 16 Peters, 362. 3 How. 646. Dwarris on Statutes, 674. It is not expressly repealed. The first Act after that of 1805, was passed in June, 1806. The Act of June, 1806, is entitled an Act “ To alter and repeal certain parts of the Act of 1805,” it is not, therefore, an Act to repeal all of the Act of 1805, and accordingly, it provides in its first section, for the recommencing of actions in certain cases, when they have been commenced in time, and have been discontinued or non-suited, after the expiration of the Statutory term ; and in the 2d section, it repeals the 5th section of the Act of 1805, and revives the Act of 1767, as to all actions and causes of actions, which originated under that Act rf ’67. There it stops. The 5th section of the Act of 1805, which is repealed by the Act of June, 1806, repeals the Act of 67. So in the terms of this Act of June, 1806, there is no repeal of the 2d section of the Act of 1805, in which the clause in question is found. It does not, therefore, expressly repeal it.

The next Act in the order of time, is the Act of December, 1806. That is an Act “ to revive and continue in force, the Act of ’67, and to amend the 5th and 9th sections of that Act. It, according to its title, does in general terms revive the Act of’67, and amends the 9th section of that Act, by re-enacting it; except the saving in favor of non-resident plaintiffs, which it omits, and substitutes in lieu of it, a saving for the plaintiff, founded on the non-residence of the defendant. At the present term of this Court, we decided in the case of Wynn vs. Lee, trustee, ¡¡•a. that the 9th section of the Act of’67 is repealed by this Act of December, 1806, (which see.) The Act of December, 1806, makes some other immaterial amendments to the Act of’67, but no where refers to the Act of 1805. It is not, therefore, expressly.repealed by the [37]*37Act of December,T806. No subsequent Act, so far as I have been able to ascertain, has any relevancy to the question I am now discussing. I think, therefore, that the clause of the Act of 1805, which limits suits upon foreign judgments, has not been expressly repealed.

The question is, now, has it been repealed by implication? The rule as to the repeal of a Statute, is well expressed by the Supreme Court of the United States, in Wood vs. the United States, 16 Peters, 362, before referred to. “ There must be, (say the Court,) a positive repugnancy between the provisions of the new laws, and those of the old; and even there, the old laws are repealed by implication, only pro tanto, to the extent of the repugnancy.” The Act of 1767, to which frequent reference has been made, was the law of limitation of the State, up to the Act of 1805, by the 5th section of which Act, it was repealed. The Act of 1805, became then the limitation law, and so continued until June, 1806, when it was, as we have seen, in one particular amended, and the clause which repealed the Act of ’67 was itself repealed, which revived the Act of’67. In December, 1806, the Act of 1767 was again revived, except the 9th and 5th sections, which were amended, and the 9th repealed. The argument in favor of the repeal of the clause in the 2d section of the Act of 1805, which we are considering is, as I understand it, drawn from the Act of December, 1806. It is this : The Act of 1806 revives the Act of 1767; (except as stated, and the exceptions have no bearing upon this question ;) it thereby, makes that the law of limitations. As much so, as if it were an Act for the first time then found upon the Statute Book. That by the revival of the Act of 1767, the Legislature intended to embody and declare, what from that time should be the law of limitations ; and that nothing but what was found in that Act, should be thenceforth in force. And if so, all previous laws upon the subject of limitations, are repealed; and of course, the clause in. the anterior Act of 1805, which limits suits on judgments.

This reasoning is not satisfactory. It is true, that the revived act takes effect as an original • act, to the extent of its provisions, but no farther. It is to be considered as an embodiment, a re-adjustment of the law of limitation, to that extent, but no farther. It is as effectually, to that extent, the law, as if upon [38]*38the same general subject, there never had been any previous legislation. If in the revived Act, all previous laws had been repealed, then, of course, there would be no question. But containing no such clause, but simply declaring that all acts and parts of acts militating against its intent and meaning, are repealed, what is the consequence ? It is, that such acts alone are repealed, and such as do not militate against its intent and meaning, remain in full force. This would be the effect, if there were no such declaration in the Act of 1806. In other words, the revival of the Act of 1767, repeals all previous laws which are repugnant to it, expressly, and would do that by implication. "We, then, have only to inquire whether the clause, in the Act of 1805, which limits suits upon foreign judgments, is repugnant to the Act of 1767. The repugnancy must be positive. The repeal must be by necessary implication. The subsequent law may cover some or all the cases provided for in a previous law, and yet there be no repugnancy between them, for the later law may be cumulative, affirmative, or auxiliary. Between the Act of 1767 and the previous Act of 1805, there is no repugnancy as to the limitations of suits on judgments. In the Act of’67, there is no limitation, whatever, provided upon suits of foreign judgments. If so, how can there be any repugnance % Iiow can an act repeal a previous act in relation to a subject matter about which it is absolutely silent, and to which there is no reference directly or by implication The Act of 1767, might move back through all time, and sweeping from its course all conflicting or repug nant laws, would leave this provision of the Act of 1805, untouched. It would not be found in its path. That provision adopted in 1805, stands; a-nd the enactments of 1806, in the then revival of the Act of 1767 are in addition to it. And thus the whole discussion terminates. It is reduced to the question of repugnancy, or not; and that is settled, by the fact that there is nothing in the Act of ’67 about limitation upon suits on foreign judgments at all. It seems, then, to he a kind of truth, that can’t be made plainer, by attempts at elucidation; that there is no repugnancy.

The Act of 1767 limits the action of debt,

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ga. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-bank-v-kirkpatrick-ga-1848.