Habersham v. Carter

1 Charlton 526
CourtChatham Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedMay 15, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Charlton 526 (Habersham v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Chatham Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Habersham v. Carter, 1 Charlton 526 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1837).

Opinion

By ROBEBT HE. OTAEMON, Judge.

AN application for injunction was made to me, at the last term of this Court, by the complainant in the above cause, and although I suggested to his counsel at the time, the doubt which I had, whether it ought to be granted, without costs being paid and security given for eventual condemnation money, in terms of our statute, yet, as the danger was pressing, and a great difference of opinion existed at the bar, as to the true construction of that statute, I thought proper to let the writ issue until further order, leaving it to the defendants’counsel to argue the point, on a motion to dissolve the injunction. That motion |was made at the close of the last term, by Mr. Millen, counsel for Benjamin F. Petton, one of the defendants, and without touching the equity of the bill, he insisted, that under our statute and rule of Court, “no injunction shall be sanctioned or granted by any Judge of the Superior Courts of this State, until the party requiring the same, shall have previously given to the party against whom such injunction is to operate, by application to the Clerk of the Superior Court for the purpose, a bond, with good and ample security for the eventual condemnation money, together with all future costs ; which said bond shall be lodged in said Clerk’s of. fice, subject to the order of the Court; and have paid all costs which may have accrued in the case, the subject of the injunction.” Neither of these requisites having been complied with, he contended that the injunction could not be sustained. Mr. [527]*527Berrien, of counsel for complainant, denied that an administrator was within the spirit of the statute referred to. (Prince’s Dig, 223-4.) He affirmed, that great injustice and hardship would result from a strict adherence to .the letter of the law, and illustrated his argument by a reference to the facts of this case, and the situation of the complainant as the representative of an insolvent estate, to shew, that he was entirely remediless Without the intervention of the strong arm of this Court, and he urged, that to require the administrator of an insolvent estate, to give bond to a creditor thereof, for “ the eventual condemnation money,” and costs, would be to deny the writ of injunction, since no one, with a proper regard to his own interests, would enter into such a stipulation.

Arguments of inconvenience are only entitled to weight with a Court, in new or doubtful cases. If the letter of the law is clear, and there is nothing to shew, that such letter is at variance with the reason and spirit, a Judge is bound to adhere to the letter. With the hardship, the inconvenience, the unreasonableness of the law, he has nothing to do. Where there is no ambiguity in the law, llibi nulla expositio contra verba expressa fienda est:”—■ “When I find the words of a statute perfectly clear, I shall adhere to the words.” Per Denman, Ch. J. in 4 Neville & Manning 426. “ The English Judges have frequently observed,” says Chancellor Kent, (1 Vol. Com. 467, note (d.) 3d edit.) “inanswer to the remark, that the Legislature meant so and so—that they in that case have not so expressed themselves, and therefore the maxim applied, quod voluit non dixit.” (See also Rex vs. Stoke Damerel, 7 Barn. & Cress. 569. Rex vs. Ramsgate, 6 B. & C, 712. The King vs. Skone, 6 East. 518.) “ Our decision,” said Lord Tenterden,in Rex vs. Barham, (8 B. & C. 104,) “may,perhaps, in this particular case, operate to defeat the object of the statute; but it is better to abide by this consequence, than to put upon it a construction not warranted by the words of the Act, in [528]*528order to give effect to what we may suppose to be the intention of the Legislature.” (And see Notley vs. Buck, 8 B. & C. 164.) “ It is much safer to adopt Wha't they have actually said, than to suppose what they meant to say.” (Ashurst, J. in Jones vs. Smart, 1 Term Rep. 51.)

There can be no doubt that the letter of this law includes all persons, whether seeking to protect their own rights, or those of others, to whom they stand in a fiduciary character. The statute declares that “ no injunction shall be granted,” without security being first given for eventual condemnation money and payment of costs, and the 7th equity rule of Court requires, that the Clerk’s certificate of payment of costs and security being given, as required by law, shall be annexed, when a bill praying an injunction is presented to the’ Judge, for his sanction. Whatever doubt may exist as to the intention of the Legislature, in reference to injunctions, where there could be' no eventual condemnation money, I see none when the object of the injunction prayed for, is to restrain a plaintiff from proceeding at law. They have said,in such case, emphatically, and without making any exception,-that “no injunction shall be granted or sanctioned,” until bond has been given for such eventual condemnation money, and costs have' been paid. The mischief which the Legislature sought to avoid, was the facility with which men might be delayed from prosecuting their legal rights, by the intervention of a Court of Equity; the remedy provided was, to require that injunction should not issue, a party should not be hindered, unless he were secured in the eventual condemnation money, if he should prove ultimately, to be in the right. The counsel for the defendants, in this case, has argued, that an executor, administrator, &c. may commit as much injury as if he was acting in his own right, and that he is, therefore, as much within the mischief and the remedy as' any other person; and there is force in the argument. And in the case of Pelot, et. al., pl’ffs. in ex’on. vs. Maxwell, et. al., trustees and ex’ors. cl’ts., decided by Judge [529]*529Andrews, at Chatham Superior Court, January term, 1837, where a motion for a new trial was made, on the ground that damages had been awarded under our statute, for a frivolous appeal, against the claimants, who acted in a representative capacity,1-‘the Court refused to sustain the motion, alleging that such a claimant might endamage the plaintiff as much as any other person, and that if the statute of the State had meant to except executors, &c. it would have said so. “He that would excepthimself from the op-» eration of a law, must shew the law that excepts him,” was the language of the Judge.

That this adherence to the plain and positive terms of the statute, may occasionally work hardship and injustice, is no argument with me. No human law can be framed, that will not sometimes have that effect. The great object of a law-giver, is to provide a rule, that will do most good and least harm. And I think that I have given sufficient authority to show, that a Judge is bound to enforce a law when it is clear, without reference to the inconveniencies that may result from it. And it is alike useless to contend, that an injunction will never be granted to an administrator, unless a sufficient cause be shewn, and therefore, that a Judge will take care that it is not made an instrument of oppression, nor suffer a party to be restrained, unless he ought so to be.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Charlton 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/habersham-v-carter-gasuperctchatha-1837.