Lisbon v. Clark

18 N.H. 234
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 N.H. 234 (Lisbon v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lisbon v. Clark, 18 N.H. 234 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1846).

Opinion

Gilchrist, J.

The act of January 13,1837, empowered towns, at their annual meetings, to establish by-laws to prevent all persons from riding or driving horses at a rate faster than a walk over any bridge within the limits of such town, which shall have cost $1,000 or over, and to annex penalties not over one dollar, &e.

[238]*238In the warrant convening the annual town meeting of Lisbon in 1842, an article was inserted, “ To see if the town will vote to pass by-laws to impose a fine of one dollar on all persons riding or driving across the village bridge, and also the salmon-hole bridge, so called, in this town, faster than a walk, agreeably to an act of this State, passed January 13, 1837.”

At the town meeting the record shows that it was “Voted, to collect fines of one dollar of all persons riding or driving across the village bridge or salmon-hole bridge faster than a walk, agreeably to an act passed January 13, 1837.”

It' is apparent from this record that the question came regularly before the, town, whether they would adopt by-laws to impose fines, in pursuance of the statute, upon persons who should improperly ride or drive across the bridges described in the warrant, and that they voted to do so, in terms that can admit of no mistake or doubt. It would therefore seem that the by-law was by that vote adopted. No particular form was prescribed by the statute in which the law should be engrossed, and there seems to be no law or custom restraining the town from selecting such form of expression as suits them, provided enough be contained to signify their will that the by-law exist, and to indicate the terms of it, and the objects to which it should apply; and provided, further, that the by-law was authorized by law, and that the bridges were of a description, as to cost, to justify the application of the powers conferred upon the town for the protection of bridges. A great variety of forms may be found in the history of legislation for the expression of the legislative will, that have never been called in question, and that are as unlike to each other as the form used in this case is to any of them. We cannot entertain a doubt that a valid by-law existed by the vote of the town of Lis-, bon, at the annual meeting in 1842, and that the action is [239]*239well founded, unless subsequent events impaired the force and validity of the by-law. A question of more difficulty, if wo attempt to solve it by the numerous canons of interpretation which the books contain, is as to the effect of the repealing chapter of the Revised Statutes, passed on the 23d day of December, 1842, upon the act of January 13, 1837; or, rather, upon this by-law, made in conformity with its provisions, and by force of the authority which it conferred.

It cannot be drawn in question, as a general proposition, that the repeal of a statute, by virtue of which a by-law has been enacted, involves also the repeal of the by-law itself, which is but a branch or an emanation from it. Whatever reason may be supposed to exist for the repeal of the statute, must also exist against the further duration of the by-law, which it was the special and sole object of the statute to bring into being and to sustain by legislative authority. This was said in substance in Stevens v. Dimond, 6 N. H. Rep. 332, and seems necessarily to be involved in the principle of all the cases which decide that, in pleading a by-law, the power to make it must be shown. Com. Dig., Pl., 2 W. 11; Kirk v. Nowell, 1 T. R. 118; Vintner's Co. v. Passey, 1 Bur. 235; Commonwealth v. Worcester, 3 Pick. 462.

It is also well settled, that, in general, when the entire provisions of a statute, or a system of laws, in pari materid, are reversed by a subsequent statute, those provisions are repealed by the latter act, upon the assumption that the legislature intended the enactment of an entirely new system, embracing the whole subject, and that an omission in the new of any provisions contained in the old, and the entire abrogation of the old, were contemplated. This reasonable doctrine was declared in Leighton v. Walker, 9 N. H. Rep. 59, upon the authority of numerous cases there cited.

The Revised Statutes, moreover, as has been said, repeal [240]*240in terms the act of January 13, 183T, upon which the by-law is founded. Rev. Stat., chap. 230. This compilation had for its object, in most of the provisions which it contains, not so much an alteration of the laws of the State, by repealing the old and enacting new and different laws, as a new and more convenient arrangement of the statutes then in force, with such alteration in the phraseology as might appear auxiliary to that object, and as might appear to favor the general end of perspicuity and certainty desirable in such cases. And these objects were pursued with an intention of not changing materially the meaning or effect of the statutes. Yet several changes were introduced, and, without any doubt, intended. In several cases beside the one now under discussion, the legislature, in pursuing the general design that has been adverted to, saw fit to repeal in terms the old law, and to reenact it, or to enact another in its precise terms, without making any provision against the ordinary effects of such repeal; these -cases not falling within the general reservations contained in the repealing statute in favor of vested rights, or within the other exceptions, specified in the 5th and following sections of the 130th chapter.

In one of these cases the court have, in the construction of the law, attached to the repeal of the old statute the ordinary consequences of a repeal, and have held that the repeal of the statute of December 16, 1828, N. H. Laws 300, which gave a settlement to parties residing four years under certain conditions, prevented the acquiring of such settlement by a residence of three years before and one year after the passing of the Revised Statutes. The term of four years’ continuous residence, and a law attaching the effect of a settlement to such residence did not coexist; the continuity having been disturbed by the repeal, and not repaired by the reenactment of the statute at the same moment, and in the same terms. But pauper laws are siricti juris, by .which is meant that there [241]*241are no rights in the case, for the claim of the pauper to municipal charity is not involved, and there are no considerations of admitted justice, or congruity even, that can intervene to found a presumption in favor of one town more than of another declining the burden of his support, or to require or to justify a reference to extrinsic matters to qualify the letter of the statute, or to aid in its interpretation.

No presumption, from such or any other extraneous circumstances, can be entertained that the legislature intended to prevent settlements from maturing by the completion of terms of residence, then in progress. So, on the contrary, no presumption so founded can exist of an intention to preserve such terms. The letter of the statute is the only guide in such a case, and we can take notice only that there has not been the residence required by existing laws. But such is not the case with regard to all statutes, and there are no better founded canons for their interpretation than some of those which require us to look beyond their mere literal expression, for the sure indication of the will of the legislature, which is the thing sought. Heydon's Case, 3 Co. 7.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.H. 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisbon-v-clark-nhsuperct-1846.