Harrington v. Harrington

58 Colo. 154
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1914
DocketNo. 7782
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 58 Colo. 154 (Harrington v. Harrington) 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
Harrington v. Harrington, 58 Colo. 154 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the court:

As plaintiff, Lizzie B. Harrington, plaintiff in error here brought action for divorce against the defendant Fred [155]*155M. Harrington, defendant in error here, in the District Court of Larimer County. October 22, 1910, the jury rendered a verdict against her, and in favor of defendant upon cross-complaint. Plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial, which was denied. December 6, 1910, judgment was rendered on the verdict in favor of defendant, but entry thereof suspended for ten days. Nothing more was done in the case until May 1, 1911, when the decree of divorce was formally entered of record, and plaintiff prayed and was allowed an appeal to this court. On August 19, 1911, plaintiff abandoned her appeal to this court, and filed a motion in the court below for an order vacating and annulling the decree entered on May 1st and setting aside the order denying the motion for a new trial, requesting that she be permitted to file additional grounds for a new trial. It appears that defendant remarried in another state before the actual formal entry of the divorce decree in his favor. This alleged bigamous act was relied upon in the motion to reopen and vacate the decree, which was overruled September 5, 1911. On this day the defendant interposed a motion to have the decree of divorce which was entered of record May 1, 1911, amended by adding to the last sentence thereof the words: ‘ ‘ done as of December 16, 1910, ’ which was allowed and the amendment made accordingly. Whereupon plaintiff sued out this writ of error to review the amended decree.

On March 28, 1912, the record on error was filed in this court and the writ of error issued. Defendant appeared specially and moved a dismissal of the writ, upon the ground that more than six months had elapsed after the date of entry of the decree before the writ was sued out. May 9, 1912, this court entered an order overruling the motion to dismiss, without prejudice, however, to the right of defendant to argue such motion at length [156]*156upon final hearing on the merits. The cause was transferred by this court to the Court of Appeals and remanded on petition of defendant, pursuant to Section 5 of an act entitled Court of Appeals, Session Laws 1911, page 266.

The main contention involves a construction of Section 8 of Chapter 6, Session Laws 1911, concerning appeals and writs of error, which reads as follows:

“A writ of error shall not be sued out after the expiration of three years from the making or entering of the judgment or decree complained of; but when a person thinking himself aggrieved by any judgment or decree ’that is the subject of review in the Supreme Court shall -be an infant, non compos mentis or imprisoned when the same was so made or entered, the time of such disability shall be excluded from the computation of the said three years.”

Section 25 of the act repeals all acts and parts of acts inconsistent therewith. The question is whether Section 2123, E. S. 1908, providing that a writ of error from any decree granting a divorce shall be sued out within six months from the date of such decree and not after, was thereby repealed.

The Code of Civil Procedure enactment of 1887 contained a provision fixing the time at three years in which to sue out a writ of error. This general provision remained intact for six years. Its vice was soon detected when applied to proceedings in divorce, and consequently the legislature, in 1893, limited the time for suing out the writ in such cases to six months. This provision is Section 2123, supra. The act of 1911 expressly repealed the entire subdivision of the Code of 1908 entitled Appeals and Writs of Error, which included the provision of 1887 upon that subject. This court, in the case of Dennis v. The People, 55 Colo. 120, 133 Pac. 741, considered [157]*157the purpose and effect of this act, and held that, although its language is, perhaps broad enough to apply to criminal cases if such was the intention of the legislature, it nevertheless purports to be an amendment to the civil code and does not apply to such cases. The' court said:

“The foregoing considerations and many others that might be mentioned make it appear plain that it was the intention to gather in one body as much as possible the provisions of the civil code relating to the review of civil causes, amend them where amendment seemed desirable and to make the writ of error the sole method of review. The whole act purports to be an amendment to the civil code without specifically saying so, and while criminal cases may be included within some of the words of the act, they are not included within the plain purport and intent thereof.”

If, for the reasons stated, the act does not alter or repeal statutes governing criminal cases, they being governed by special provisions, it is equally true, upon like considerations, that it does not alter or repeal the special provisions relating to divorce proceedings. The primary purpose and effect of the act was to amend the civil code, and it cannot be held to amend or repeal statutes controlling proceedings to which the civil code does not apply, unless it does so directly. Section 6 of the new act expressly repeals “all statutes granting and regulating appeals from district, county and juvenile courts, in all actions, suits and proceedings, both civil and criminal.” This indicates that the legislature, in thus specifically abolishing the right of appeal given by Section 2123, supra,, in divorce proceedings, intended, by the very fact that it does not refer to the provision of that section relating to writs of error, to permit it to stand undisturbed. Moreover, as the later act expressly repealed the entire [158]*158subdivision of the Code of 1908 relating to appeals and writs of error and is in purpose and effect limited to amending the civil code, the provision therein that “all acts and parts of acts inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed” must be held to apply only to all acts and parts of acts of the civil code inconsistent with the new act.

Section 8 of the act of 1911, supra, is. substantially identical in word and line with the provision of 1887 upon the subject of writs of error, as the same appears in the Code of 1908. Nowhere in the act is there any reference made to Section 2123, supra, and if it repealed this section, it did so purely by implication. That such is its effect cannot be conceded, for it would be illogical to so hold in view of the construction already given the act by this court.

- In other words, since it has been held that the primary purpose and effect of the act of 1911 was to' repeal and amend the civil code, it could repeal no provision outside of the code except by express reference. In Lewis ’ Sutherlands Statutory Construction these, general rules are stated concerning repeals by implication:

“If, by fair and reasonable interpretation, acts which are seemingly incompatable of contradictory may be enforced and made to operate in harmony and without absurdity, both will be upheld, and the later one will not be regarded as repealing the others by construction or intendment.

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58 Colo. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-harrington-colo-1914.