Decker v. Myles

4 Colo. 558
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 4 Colo. 558 (Decker v. Myles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Decker v. Myles, 4 Colo. 558 (Colo. 1879).

Opinion

Stone, J.

Two questions are raised by appellants: 1st.. Whether the notice to other lien claimants was published in compliance with the statute; and 2d. Whether lien claimants not made parties and served with process are affected by the decree. The 9th section of the lien law. of 1872-(Sess. Laws, p. 152), under which the proceedings were had,, requires that “ the plaintiff shall cause a notice to be published at least once a wreek for three consecutive weeks in some newspaper published in the county, if there be one, and if not, then by posting the same in the three most public-places in the county, notifying all persons holding or claiming liens under the provisions of this act on said premises,, to be and appear in said court on a day specified therein, and during a regular term _ of said court, and to exhibit then and there the proofs of their said liens.”

The lien claimant, from whom the appellee derived title under the decree, caused such a notice to be published, three times in three consecutive weeks in a weekly paper,. [561]*561although less than twenty-one days intervened between the date of the first publication and the time the other lien claimants were therein notified to appear, and the question is presented, whether this was a sufficient notice under the statute above quoted.

An examination of all the authorities we have been able to find, bearing upon this and similar cases, shows some contrariety of decisions by the courts of different States; much of this apparent conflict, however, is due to the construction put upon the precise language of different statutes.

The case most in point against the sufficiency of this notice is that of Shipley v. Mitchell, 7 Blackf. 473, where under a statute requiring publication “for three successive weeks ” before, etc., it was held that, while the language admitted of two constructions, the court was inclined to adopt that which required three full weeks to intervene between the date of the first publication and the time named. In a Pennsylvania case, where a notice was required to be given to a board’of commissioners “ three weeks before the time of meeting,” the court say : “ The order was not for notice during the three successive weeks, nor by a given number of insertions in newspapers in successive weeks, but it required a certain duration of time before the time of meeting,” and, therefore, it was held that “ three full weeks’ notice” was necessary. In re North Whitehall Township, 47. Penn. St. 160.

In the case of Mitchell v. Woodson, 37 Miss. 573, it was held that where the notice was required to be “ published weekly for one month, ” a full calendar month was intended and must be covered by the period of publication, dating from the first. The question in that case seemed to be merely whether a calendar or lunar month was intended, and hence is scarcely in point. The case of Early v. Doe, 16 How. 615, which is strongly relied on by counsel for appellant, is upon a statute requiring publication in some newspaper “ once in each week, for at least twelve [562]*562successive weeks.” The court held that eighty-four days, the full period of twelve weeks, must intervene between the first publication and the day of sale, in order to give full force and effect to the language of the statute. It is to be observed that the words “at least” are so placed in the sentence as to qualify the number of weeks, and not the number of publications in each week, as is the case in our statute; and in construing this so as to give meaning to the precise language employed, the court say: “We do not doubt if the statute had been c once in each week for twelve successive weeks’ a previous notice of the particular day of sale having been given to the owner of the property, that it might very well be concluded that twelve notices in different successive weeks, though the last insertion was on the day of sale, was sufficient. But where the legislature has used the words £ for at least- twelve successive weeks ’ we cannot doubt that the words £ at least,’ as they would do in common parlance, mean a duration of the time that there is in twelve successive weeks or eighty-four days. Every statute must be construed from the words in it, and that construction preferred which gives to all of them an operative meaning.” Besides these cases which are citéd as sustaining the construction claimed by appellants, there are three cases, which we have not been able to consult, decided by some of the district courts of Pennsylvania, cited as sustaining the same view, by Mr. Freeman, in his work on Executions, wherein he states rather broadly, and with less than his usual care, we think, that “ a majority of the cases upon this subject, * * * shows that the statute requiring notice for three weeks cannot be satisfied by a publication for less than twenty-one days.” On the contrary a different construction is put upon such statute by the highest courts of the States of Illinois, New York, Massachusetts, and Maine. In Garrett v. Moss, 20 Ill. 554, a sale was held valid, made under a decree which required notice of the sale to be ad-. vertised in a certain newspaper “for three weeks success[563]*563ively,” although less than twenty-one days intervened between the date of the first publication and the day of sale. In Pearson v. Bradley, 48 Ill. 250, the same construction is put upon a statute requiring the notice to be published “for three successive weeks, once each week,” and while the court say that the statute may receive either construction, they further observe that “ the legislature, if it had intended to require merely an insertion in three different weekly issues of a newspaper, prior to the day of sale, would naturally have used precisely the language they did use, while if they had intended the first publication should be three full weeks before the sale, they would probably have employed terms more explicit and unmistakable. In Andrews v. The People, 84 Ill. 34, where the notice was to be published “three times for three successive weeks,” the court, following the decision in Pearson v. Bradley, supra, say : “ It is true, three full weeks did not elapse between the dates of the first and last insertion, nor does the reading of the statute require that it should. The publication was made more than three times, and for three successive weeks; * * * we are inclined to hold the notice given a substantial compliance with the statutes.” In Frothingham v. March, 1 Mass. 253, the notification was required to be “printed three weeks successively,” which was to be deemed equivalent to giving “thirty days’ public notice by posting up notification of such sale.” The court say: “ If the law required that all or any of the publications should be thirty days previous to the sale, the defendant has broken his covenant, otherwise not. * * In this case * * the notification was printed three weeks successively. * * The defendant then has brought his case within the express words of the statute, and as it appears to me it is within the sense, the plain and obvious meaning of the words; nor can I conceive any reason for giving them any other construction than that which arises from the common and obvious import of the words used in the act.” The foregoing is quoted from the opinion of [564]*564Seme-wick, J. Separate concurring opinions upon the same point were rendered by Thacher and Sewell, JJ. In the case of Dexter v. Shepard, 117 Mass.

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4 Colo. 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decker-v-myles-colo-1879.