Eld v. Gorham

20 Conn. 8
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 20 Conn. 8 (Eld v. Gorham) 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
Eld v. Gorham, 20 Conn. 8 (Colo. 1849).

Opinion

Storrs, J.

The question first presented in this case, is, whether the volume termed “ The Revised Statutes of the State of Connecticut,” published during the present year, under the superintendence of the committee of revision, appointed by the General Assembly for that purpose in 1847, is to be deemed to contain all the public statute laws which were in force in this state, when the present action was tried. If this question is resolved in the affirmative, it is conceded, that the court below erred in excluding the defendant as a witness; since by the 141st section of the act contained in those statutes, entitled “An Act for the regulation of civil actions,” it is provided, that “no person shall be disqualified as a witness, in any suit or proceeding at law or in equity, by reason of his interest in the event of the same, as a party or otherwise;” and there is no saving or excepting clause in that act other than that contained in the 143rd section, which applies only to suits pending on the 27th day [13]*13of June, 1848, which was the day next preceding that on which this suit was commenced.

The validity of this body of Revised Statutes, as thus published, depends on the effect which is to be given to that part of the act, "relating to the Revised Statutes,” passed in 1848, which provides for the mode of authenticating the statutes revised and compiled by said committee, Sess. Laws of 1848, ch. 80. p. 70.

The committee appointed in 1847, to revise the public statute laws of the state then in force, having completed said revision, reported the same to the legislature at its session in 1848, which, after having been referred to the joint select committee on the subject of that revision, was then approved by the act last above-mentioned; and it was further enacted, by the 2nd section of that act, that the said revised acts so approved, and the acts passed at the then present session, when incorporated with the said revised acts, should constitute “The Revised Statutes of the State of Connecticut;" and the same were “thereby enacted and confirmed as such;" and by the 3rd section, all public statute laws, other than the said acts revised and approved, and the acts passed at said session of 1848, and other than acts of incorporation, confirming statutes and acts, which, although public acts in form, are of a merely private nature, were repealed. In the 5th section, it is provided, that said acts and the said revised statutes shall go into effect on the 1st day of January, 1849, and not before.

The act in the revised statutes, which has been mentioned, removing the common law disability of parties as witnesses, was first enacted in 1848; and, as it was originally passed, contained no special limitation as to the time when it should go into operation; and therefore, by the general law on that subject, took effect from and after the rising of the General Assembly of 1848, by which it was passed; which, it is conceded, took place on the 28th day of June of that year, the day on which the present suit was commenced. Sess. Laws of 1848, ch. 44. p. 38. That act did not constitute a part of the statute laws which were to be revised by the revising committee, since the acts to be revised by them consisted only of the statutes which were in force previous to the session of the legislature of that year; but by the act, [14]*14“relating to the revised statutes,” passed in 1848, that act, together with the other statutes enacted that year, were to be incorporated with said revised acts, and they were together to constitute the said revised statutes of the state. We find, however, in the volume of revised statutes as published, that in connexion with the provision in the 141st section of the act for the regulation of civil actions, (that parties in suits shall be admissible as witnesses,) there is a further provision in the 143rd section of the same act, that the said provision in the 141st section shall not affect any suit pending on the 27th day of June, 1848. without any other limitation.

The difference, therefore, between the provision respecting the competency of parties as witnesses, as it was originally passed, and as it now stands in the revised code, is, that by the former, it took effect on the 28th day of June, 1848, the day of the commencement of this suit, and therefore raises the question, whether it applied to a suit commenced on that day; whereas by the latter, it clearly applies to this suit, which was brought after the 27th day of June, 1848, and therefore rendered the defendant a competent witness. The question is, whether the act, as it was originally passed, or as it is now found in the revised code, is to be considered the law on this subject when this action was tried in the superior court. The defendant claims, that the certificate of the secretary, annexed to the revised statutes, furnishes evidence which must be deemed conclusive of the existence and validity of the laws as they are contained in those statutes. The plaintiff insists, that that certificate is not thus conclusive, but that we may look behind it, into the proceedings of the committee of revision; that by doing so, it appealr, that they exceeded the powers conferred on them, in inserting a provision in the published revised statutes, limiting the provision therein, respecting the competency of parties as witnesses, to suits pending on the 27th day of June, 1848; and that the question as to the effect of that provision in the revised statutes, is to be determined, as if it was therein declared, that it should take effect on the rising of the legislature of 1848, when it took effect, by the act containing it, as originally passed. And on the supposition that the claim of the plaintiff in this particular is valid, he further claims, that, on the facts conceded in this case, the principles of law in regard to [15]*15the construction of statutes, warranted the court below in excluding the defendant as a witness.

We think that the effect of the act relating to the revised statutes, passed in 1848, was, to continue in force until the 1st day of January, 1849, all of the public statute laws which were in force at the time of the passage of that act, and not repealed at the session at which it was passed, and also the acts passed at that session; and from the 1st day of January, 1849, inclusive, to constitute the acts therein mentioned, which had been revised by the revising committee, together with the acts passed at the session of 1848, when the latter should be incorporated with said revised acts, the public statute laws, and (with the exceptions and qualifications contained in the 3rd section, which have no application to the question now before us,) the only public statute laws of this state, by the name of "The Revised Statute Laws of the state of Connecticut," and to enact and confirm them as

But the legislature further deemed it expedient to prescribe a simple, convenient and certain mode for ascertaining what particular statutes constituted the revised code.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Conn. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eld-v-gorham-conn-1849.