Herring v. Selding

2 Aik. 12
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedDecember 15, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Aik. 12 (Herring v. Selding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herring v. Selding, 2 Aik. 12 (Vt. 1826).

Opinion

Hutchinson, J.

after stating the case, delivered the following opinion of the Court.

The Court might content themselves, in this case, by only saying, that the special notice is totally defective, in not setting forth particularly the statute of New-York, under which it is said the discharge of Herring was procured. The original plaintiffs were entitled to as substantial information of the provisions of that statute, when it comes in the form of a notice, as when in the form of a special plea. The publick statutes of another state are treated here, as private statutes, as to the necessity of pleading the same; and, according to the cases cited, and a long and uniform practice, the statute allowing notice, only dispenses with the form, not the substance, of special pleadings. By the notice in the present case, the creditor can derive no knowledge of the provisions of the statute relied upon, unless by presuming that the proceedings set forth were conformable to the act; whereas, he was entitled to such exhibition as would enable [17]*17him to judge whether to object to the prpceedings, as not warranted by the statute itself.

But the question the plaintiff in error wishes to try, and upon which the opinion of the Court will be concisely stated, is, whether such a statute as the proceedings named in the notice suppose, and a discharge regularly procured, under such statute, of the dates pointed but in the notice, form any bar to the action .brought upon the notes.

Decided cases, of too high authority to be resisted by this Court, have marked a plain path upon this question. Our decision in this case might be revised by a writ of error in the supreme court of the United States. Of course, the decision of that court, if in point, should be considered of paramount authority, and govern our decision.

The cases cited from the fourth of Wheaton, show fully the opinion of that Court, that a law of a state, making, provision that a debtor may be discharged from his contract without payment, impairs the obligation of such contract, and is unconstitutional and void. And in the case of McMillen vs. McNeil, on page 212, of the 4th of Wheaton, Chief Justice Marshal says, “that the circumstance of the state law, under which the debt was attempted to be discharged, having been passed before the debt was contracted, made no difference in the application of . the principle.”

In the 6th of Wheaton, 131, The Bank vs. Smith, the same chief justice said, that both parties living ip the same state whe.n the contract was made, and continuing lolive there till the suit was brought in its own courts, made-no difference.

Those decisions have been followed in this Court, in a case in all respects like the present, which should appear in the second volume of Chipman's Reports.

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Related

Jenness v. Simpson
69 A. 646 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1908)
Worthen v. Dickey
54 Vt. 277 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Aik. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herring-v-selding-vt-1826.