Holbrook v. Holbrook

18 Mass. 248
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 Mass. 248 (Holbrook v. Holbrook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. Holbrook, 18 Mass. 248 (Mass. 1822).

Opinion

[256]*256The opinion of the Court (Parker C. J. dissenting) xvas read at February term 1823, as drawn up by

Wilde J.

The error assigned in this case depends on the second section of the statute of 1811, c. 6. That this section is not repugnant to the principles of the constitution was determined in the case of Adams v. Howe & al., 14 Mass. Rep 340. Whether it is a wise and salutary provision or not is a question for the consideration of the legislature, and not within the province of this Court to determine. If the statute be constitutional, the Court have only to declare the law according to the apparent meaning of the legislature. What, then, is the true construction of this section of the statute i It provides, that “whenever any person shall become a "member of any religious society, corporate or unincorporate, within this Commonwealth, such membership shall be certified by a committee of such society, chosen for this purpose, and filed with the clerk of the town where he dwells, such person shall for ever afterwards be exempted from taxation for the support of public worship and public teachers of religion in every other religious corporation whatsoever, so long as he shall continue such membership.”

The plaintiff claims to be exempted from taxation in The First Parish in Braintree, where he resides, he having, before the assessment of the tax complained of, joined a religious and incorporated society in an adjoining town, and having produced and filed with the clerk of the town of Braintree a certificate thereof from a committee of the society, conformably to the statute. The objection made to this claim is, that the religious society of which the plaintiff became a member, and the parish in which he resides, are of the same denomination of Christians, and that the Si. 1811, c. 6, was not intended to apply to persons withdrawing from one religious society or corporation to join another of the same denomination.

To determine this point it does not appear to me necessary to look beyond the second section of the statute. This contains a provision independent of, and in addition to, the one contained in the constitution and enlarged by the first section of the act. The lánguage of the second section is clear and unambiguous ; so that if the plain and obvious import of the [257]*257words is to be regarded as conclusive, the plaintiff is certainly exempted from taxation for the support of public worship “ in every religious corporation whatsoever,” excepting the one of which he is a member. When the words of a statute are clear and unequivocal, the rules of construction established for doubtful cases are not applicable, and it appears to me that the words of this section of the statute are so explicit as to leave no room for construction.

This can hardly be doubted, if the second section be considered independent of the other sections of the statute. If thus considered, I apprehend no one could raise a question as to the true meaning of the legislature. But the Court do not decide the case upon this limited ground. When the meaning of any particular section or clause of a statute is questioned, it is proper, no doubt, to look into the other parts of the statute ; otherwise the different sections of the same statute might be so construed as to be repugnant, and the intention of the legislature might be defeated. And if, upon examination, the general meaning and object of the statute should be found inconsistent with the literal import of any particular clause or section, such clause or section must, if possible, be construed according to the spirit of the act. But to warrant the application of this rule, the intention of the legislature must be clear and manifest. The question then is, whether the intention of the legislature is so plainly expressed, in other parts of the statute, as to limit and restrain the general words used in the second section. If this intention is expressed at all, it must be discovered by the preamble or the first section.

As to the preamble, it recites merely a clause of the constitution, which is enlarged by the first section. It does not point to the third and fourth sections, nor, as I can perceive, to the second, which is an independent provision, not founded on the recited clause of the constitution. It is said in the case of Mace v. Cammel, Lofft, 782, “ That though the preamble be generally a key to the statute, yet it does not always open all parts of it ; but sometimes the legislature having a particular mischief in view, to prevent which was the first and immediate object of the statute, recites that in the preamble, and then goes on in the body of the act to provide a remedy for general mis[258]*258chiefs, of the same nature, but of different species, not ex' Pressed in the preamble, nor perhaps then in contemplation.” Chief Justice Willes also says, in the case o Colehan v. Cooke Willes, 395, “ If the words of an act of parliament be doubtful, it may be proper to have recourse tó the preamble to find out the meaning of the legislature ; but where the words of the enacting part are plain and express, I do not think that they ought to be restrained by the preamble ; for the preamble may only recite some particular mischiefs which have happened, but the enacting clause may not only be calculated to prevent those mischiefs, but others also of a like nature.” This is undoubtedly true, and might be demonstrated by reference to very many statutes, in which it will be found that the preamble states imperfectly the views of the legislature, and can afford but little aid in the construction of the enacting parts. It is not unfrequently merely introductory to the first section, and it appears to me it was so used in the statute under consideration, and that it applies to no parts of the statute except the first section.

But it has been argued, that the views of the legislature, as expressed in the first section, are to be considered as manifesting the limited sense in which the second section is to be understood. I have not, however, been able to satisfy myself that such was the intention of the legislature. If it had been, no good reason can be given why the words of limitation made use of in the first section should have been omitted in the second. It cannot be supposed that so important an omission could have been carelessly overlooked, when we recollect the interest and the opposition the subject excited in the minds, not only of the legislature, but of the community. These words of limitation were first used in the constitution, and were repeated in the St. 1799, c. 87, § 4. With these provisions, together with the preamble and first section of the act of 1811 before them, it seems impossible to believe that the legislature could have omitted these words in the second section by mistake.

The first section provides only for the appropriation of the money after the assessment and the collection of the tax. Neither by this provision, nor by the law of 1799, nor by the constitution, is any one exempted from taxation for the support [259]*259of public worship. No such exemption seems to have been contemplated by the framers of the constitution, who manifestly intended that every one should be held to contribute according to his ability to the support of public worship, upon the institution and maintenance of which the happiness of the people, and the good order and preservation of civil government, so essentially depend.

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In Re Gray
378 B.R. 728 (D. Massachusetts, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
18 Mass. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-holbrook-mass-1822.