Livingston v. Moore

15 F. Cas. 677

This text of 15 F. Cas. 677 (Livingston v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston v. Moore, 15 F. Cas. 677 (circtedpa 1830).

Opinion

THE COURT

then decided:

1. That the provision in the law of 1785, which creates the lien, is not repealed by any subsequent law or laws, expressly or by implication.

2. That the settlement of the account before them, made in the manner mentioned, did create a lien on all the real estate of J. Nicholson throughout the state.

This decision is the law of the case as it was presented in the supreme court of the state, and no further. The party here, who [682]*682was not a party to that suit, has a right to the benefit oí any new facts which would vary the ease, if there be any such. We must therefore consider such of his objections to the settlements as were not brought into view, and have not been disposed of by the judgment of the court in the case cited.

It is alleged that John Nicholson had a legal right to notice of the intended settlement of his account; that he had no such notice, and that therefore the settlement made by the accounting officers of the commonwealth was ex parte, and had no binding force on him or his property. This allegation, as an affirmative fact that he had no notice, is not supported by evidence or admission, as it was in Fitler’s Case; but the case here is, that no proof has been produced that he had notice. We come at once to these questions: Was any notice necessáry to give a legal validity to these settlements? May a notice be now presumed? Is there any evidence of it, which, at this distance of time, and under the circumstances of the case, ought to satisfy us that it was given, or that, what is equivalent to it. the party attended at the settlements? One of the plaintiff’s counsel has insisted that the notice directed by the fifth section of the law of 17S2, which is in truth a process of summons, to be issued by a prothonotary and served by a sheriff, was such a notice as John Nicholson was entitled to. On turning to the act, it, to me, is extremely clear, that the notice there has no reference whatever to accounts which should afterwards arise and be settled with the treasury of the commonwealth. It applies only to certain accounts, then of loong standing, and unsettled or not finally closed, with persons having in their hands large sums of money or effects belonging to the commonwealth, in danger of being lost, if “vigorous measures be not taken to compel such persons to settle their accounts, and discharge the balances which may appear to be due to the state.” The comptroller is ordered to form lists or abstracts of the names and places of abode, &c. of such persons; and it is to them that the notice or summons is to be issued, to be followed by the subsequent proceedings, according to the act.

We recur to the question, was any notice required to be given to John Nicholson, of the intended settlements of his accounts? Certainly none is directed by the numerous acts of assembly which have been passed for settling the accounts of public debtors. It is nevertheless insisted that it is indispensable; and the opinion of the supreme court of the state is relied upon (Fitler’s Case, 12 Serg. & R. 277) to prove the necessity of notices, although none may be expressly directed by the act under which an account is settled. The circumstances of that case were very peculiar, showing a strong and clear equity with the defendant, not merely in the point of notice, but in the substantial merits in controversy. Great wrong had been done him in the settlement, and it was admitted by the accounting officer: what is more material, there were many expressions and provisions of the acts under which his" accounts were settled, from which the court thought it was “manifest the legislature intended, in such case, that the party should have been summoned, or in some way or other have had notice.” The case decided by the court, was very different from this; it is an authority only so far as they are the same. In the acts of the legislature we have to construe, there are no such provisions as are found in Fitler’s Case, from which the court inferred a manifest legislative intention of notice. Some general expressions of the chief justice, in delivering the opinion of the court, are resorted to to sustain the objection here; such as that notice to the party, “is one of the most substantial requisites of natural justice;” that “in proportion as power approaches to arbitrary discretion, it should be restrained within the-limits prescribed to it by the legislature.” Again, “the word ‘settlement’ imports a joint act of the parties who have computed together; and an ex parte settlement (if any thing properly be so called) is contrary to the plainest principles of natural justice.” This is all true, and well applied to the case before that court, in which they thought that the proceeding of the accounting officer had not been “restrained within the limits prescribed to it by the legislature;” but it would be a bold step in this, or any other court, to pronounce an act of a state legislature unconstitutional and void, on such general opinions and principles, however just in themselves; and without going thus far,, they will avail nothing for the plaintiffs in this case.. If, therefore, it were here proved or admitted that J. Nicholson had no notice of the settlements now charged upon him and his property, made by virtue of legislative acts, which it is admitted require no notice, I should not imagine myself to be authorized to pronounce the acts and proceedings of the legislature invalid; for the argument, on the subject of notice, followed out, ends in this, if it is to serve the plaintiffs, that the acts of 1SUÜ are unconstitutional and void, because they ordered the sale of the estate of John Nicholson. by virtue of a lien created by a settlement of his accounts, which settlement was made without notice to him, and therefore gave no authority to the legislature to pass the acts in question; or that no lien was, or constitutionally could be created, by a settlement of accounts without notice to the parties, although the legislature had required no notice, and that such a settlement itself was illegal, and not binding on the party or his property. That is (supposing the notice not to be required by the laws), that the legislature has no power to direct a settlement of a debtor's accounts, nor to make the balance due on such a settlement, a lien [683]*683ón liis property without notice. Granting this to be just; is it a void act?

If the argument does not come to this conclusion, it does not help the plaintiffs. And can we soberly and judiciously bring it to this conclusion? Can we solemnly pronounce a law of this state to be void, because a notice was not given, when none was required, by the power having the clear right to say whether it should be given or not? I might think notice to be a “substantial requisite of natural justice,” but in a certain case, the legislature has thought otherwise; and they had a constitutional right to think so, and to act upon their own opinion of this abstract question, as well as of its application to the case they were providing for. In Fitter’s Case, the only question was, whether he should be charged with interest on the balance of his account, a question peculiarly within the equity of the court, and the opinions of substantial justice; that court was not called upon on such a point, to declare a law of the state void, and to prostrate it as an illegal assumption of legislative power. No court has yet presumed to question a legislative act, on the ground of a difference with their notions of natural justice; and no legislature would, or ought to submit to such a restriction of their authority.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-moore-circtedpa-1830.