Hulburt v. Merriam

3 Mich. 144
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Mich. 144 (Hulburt v. Merriam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hulburt v. Merriam, 3 Mich. 144 (Mich. 1854).

Opinion

By tbe Court,

Whipple, J.

The Revision of 1838 provides that when a cause of action shall have accrued “ before the 31st day of August, 1838, it shall not be affected by this chapter ; but all such causes of action shall be determined agreeably to the law under which the right of action accrued.”

This provision received from this Court an interpretation in the case of Cramer vs. Lastley, 2 Doug. 307; and the view taken by us in that case, was confirmed by an act of the Legislature, in 1843. Under these acts and the construction given to them by this Court, the questions submitted for our advice are answered, when we determined-what law in relation to the limitation of actions was in force in 1834, when the cause of action accrued to the plaintiffs.

• The 10th section of the “ act for the limitation of suits,” &c., adopted May 15,1820, as printed, provides that “ this act shall not extend to bar any infant, feme covert, persons imprisoned, or beyond seas, or without the United States, or non compos mentis, from bringing either of the actions before mentioned, within the term before set and limited for bringing such actions, calculating from the time such impediment shall be removed.”

This section of the act of 1820, is found in the Revisions of 1827 and 1833.

By section two of the schedule to the Constitution of 1835, it is provided that “ all laws now in force in the Territory of Michigan, which are not repugnant to this Constitution, shall remain in force until they expire by their own limitations, or be altered or repealed by the Legislature.” The laws of the Territory, by this provision, became the laws of the State, when the Constitution took effect.

Under this provision of the Constitution, and the laws [150]*150above referred to, the solution of the questions propounded to us by the Circuit Court would not be difficult. But it is said that some of the exceptions to be found in the 10th section of the act of 1820, as printed, never had the force of law; and in support of this view we have been referred to a certified copy of the original act, and of a record of the same, now deposited in the office of the Secretary, of State. By the act, to which the signatures, respectively, of the Governor and Judges by whom it was adopted, are affixed, it appears that the exceptions specified in the original draft of section 10, were as follows: “And be it further enacted., that this act shall not extend to bar any infant, feme covert, persons imprisoned, or beyond seas,. without the United States, or non compos mentis,” &c. The words “ beyond seas ” are erased in the act now on file; so that the difference between the act as it now appears in the archives of the State Department, and the act as printed in 1820, consists in this — that in the latter the words “beyond seasf erased in the original act, are found in the printed code; and the word <w, where it occurs in immediate connection with the words “ without the United States,” in the act as printed, was never inserted in the original.

The ordinance of 1787 made it the duty of the Governor and Judges to report to Congress the laws by them adopted. This law of 1820 was so reported, and from an examination of a certified copy procured from the State Department at Washington, it appears that as reported to Congress, the exceptions in section 10 are — “ persons imprisoned or without the United States,” «fee. No doubt, then, can exist, but that as originally adopted, section 10 contained no exceptions in favor of persons beyond seas, but not without the United States. The interpolation of the word “or,” it is very clear, creates the material discrepancy between the original and printed act; for, reading the 10th section, with the word or stricken out, the fourth exception would include [151]*151persons “beyond seas, without the United States.” It i» conceded that the term “persons beyond seas,” according to its legal interpretation, includes persons out of the State, as well as those out of the United States.

If the printed act, as it is found in the Bevisions of 1820,, 1827, and 1833, is to prevail, the plaintiffs have brought themselves within one of the exceptions specified in section 10, and would be entitled to judgment on the demurrer: if on the contrary, the original act deposited in the State Department is to govern, then it is equally manifest that the-defendants have spread upon the record a perfect defence.

The act of the 15th of May, 1820, took effect under the first-grade of the Territorial government. The Governor and Judges were, by the ordinance of 1787, invested with the authority to adopt laws of the original States, but were not clothed with legislative powers.

The act of 1820 appears on its face to have been borrowed’ from Vermont, and it has been said that the exceptions contained in the Vermont law, differ from those embraced in section 10 of the act of 1820. If this be true, then the act of' the Governor and Judges, in this respect, was unauthorized and invalid. It is believed, however, that the erasure of the-words, “beyond seas” in the Vermont law would not affect its-, legal interpretation. The words of that law are, “ or beyond seas, without the United States.” It is too clear for argument that the words “beyond seas” are superfluous, and the Governor and Judges, while they were restricted as to the source-from which to adopt laws, were not only at liberty to reject-superfluous words, but to make such changes in the language as their taste might suggest. The authority to adopt a lew, does not necessarily imply that the precise words of that law are to be adopted. As this authority to adopt laws was vested in the highest executive and judicial fimetionaries of the territory, who were doubtless familiar with the import of technical terms, it is not unlikely that the words “beyond, [152]*152'seas” were intentionally erased, as they were manifestly superfluous. That this view may very well have been taken, I Prefer to the case of "Whitney et al. vs. Goddard, admr., 20 Pick. 301. The exceptions to section 4 of the Massachusetts statute, is expressed in these words: “This act shall not be understood to bar any infant, feme covert, persons imprisoned, or beyond sea, without any of the United States,” &c. It will be perceived that the saving provision in the statute is identical with that of the Vermont statute.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Mich. 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hulburt-v-merriam-mich-1854.