McGregor v. Goldammer

2 Posey 49, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 238
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Posey 49 (McGregor v. Goldammer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGregor v. Goldammer, 2 Posey 49, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 238 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

Opinion.— The construction is urged, by counsel for the appellee, that the limitation clause, as it may, for conven[50]*50ience be termed, has a retrospective operation in its application to the defense or plea of the statutes of limitation, and that any person against whom the statutes of limitation shall be pleaded after the adoption of the constitution of 1869 is entitled to have the period of adverse possession which is pleaded against him computed at seven years, commencing from the date of the removal of the disability protecting him, irrespective of the fact that at the date of the adoption of the constitution his pre-existing disability had been removed. Authority is cited (De Cordova v. The City of Galveston, 4 Tex., 470) by the counsel in his brief to support the propósition that acts of limitation apply as well to causes of action existing preceding their enactment as to those accruing subsequently. It cannot be questioned but that laws which (as, for instance, statutes of limitation) affect the remedy merely are not within the scope of the inhibition against retrospective laws unless the remedy be entirely taken away, or be incumbered with conditions that would render it useless or impracticable; there cannot be a vested right to any particular remedy. It has been held that even when a suit has been definitively decided and no appeal taken, and the time for appealing expired, that a right of appeal can be given by a statute passed for that purpose. United States v. Samperyac, 7 Peters, 222; Hempstead’s Arkansas C. C. R., 119. The unquestionable, conclusive operation of laws pertaining to the remedy to affect and determine the rights of parties which may have previously accrued and have become the subject of judicial determination is illustrated by abundant authority everywhere, and upon very numerous Subjects testing the application of the principle.

The question here for solution, however, is not whether a law of limitation would be applicable to past as well as prospective conditions or relations when falling under the operation of a general law, but it rather is, whether any such general rule has, in fact, been prescribed, which, according to its terms and intent, embraces within its operation [51]*51persons other than those who meet the description given in the law at the time of its enactment. In a word, is the oíanse in question a rule or law prescribing, in effect, that where the statute of limitations is relied on as a defense, where the party to be aifected by the lapse of time has been under disability during any portion of the period of adverse possession of the party pleading the statute, that not less than seven years of such possession after the removal of such disability, regardless of the time when the disability may have determined, shall bar the right of action? If it admits of such an interpretation, it follows, from the concession which has been allowed respecting statutes affecting the remedy, that a remedial rule of that kind would be applied to all cases arising after the law went into force, and would not be inhibited as a retrospective law. Such, however, is not the purport of that clause; it is not such a rule or declaration of law applicable to the subject of defense under the plea of the statutes of limitation. It is, however, the declaration of a rule of law, and fixing a right in favor of the classes of persons embraced within it, and who, when the constitution shall take effect, and thereafter, being married women, infants or insane persons, shall not be barred of their rights of property by adverse possession, or law of limitation, of less than seven years from, and after the removal of each and all of their respective disabilities.

It was not the purpose of the framers of the constitution, in thus establishing the fundamental law, “ intended mainly to contain the principles upon xvhick the government is founded, regulating the division of the sovereign powers, and directing to what persons each of these powers is to be confided, and the manner in which it is to be executed,” to establish in such an instrument rules and laws of proceeding pertaining to. remedial laxvs; and when a provision of this character is found in the constitution, unless the plain language of its terms required it, it should be construed rather as a limitation upon the power of the legislature to abridge the period of time fixed in the clause, and as the [52]*52declaration of a maxim and rule applicable to then existing and future rights and remedies, than as a mere legislative enactment for the administration of the law applicable to the defense of the statutes of limitation. Unless expressions contained in it indicated an intention to give it a retrospective effect, such intent would not be presumed, but rather the reverse. To give the clause or section referred to a retrospective operation, in accordance with the construction contended for by the appellee’s counsel, would result in determining that the bare declaration, in the constitution, of an extension of the periods of time fixed previously by law in favor of a designated class of persons, is equivalent to a rule of law applicable to other persons as well, viz., adults, who previously, and before the enactment of the section, may have once answered to the description contained in the constitution. Thus, the construction insisted upon is not maintainable upon the liberal terms of the law, and it is confronted with still more grave impediments in the general rules and maxims of constitutional and statutory construction, as will be seen from the commentaries and decisions which lay down and determine the principles applicable to retrospective laws.

Chancellor Kent, in Dash v. Van Kleeck, 7 Johns., 477, remarked: “Ithink it can be shown that the act cannot be adjudged to operate • either as a new rule for the government of a past case, or as interpreting a former statute for the direction of the courts; and I should be unwilling to consider any act so intended, unless the intention was made manifest by express words, because it would be a violation of fundamental principles, which is never presumed.”

Justice Thompson, in the same case, said: “It may, in general, be truly observed of retrospective laws of every description, that they neither accord with sound legislation nor the fundamental principles of the social compact.” How unjust, then, the imputation against the .legislature that they intend a law to be of that description unless the most clear and unequivocal expressions are adopted.

[53]*53Judge Cooley, in his treatise on Constitutional Limitations, deduces from his exploration of the subject the opinion that “a constitution should operate prospectively only unless the words employed show a clear intention that it should have a retrospective effect.” It is the rule applicable to statutes, and one that is followed and approved as correct.

“Retrospective legislation, except when designed to cure formal defects, or otherwise operate remedially, is commonly objectionable in principle and apt to result in injustice; and it is a sound rule of construction which refuses lightly to imply an intent to enact it.” And the learned author proceeds to add, “ and we are aware of no reasons applicable to ordinary legislation which do not, upon this point, apply equally -well to constitutions.” Oooley on Const. Lira., p. 62, citing Allbyer v. The State, 10 Ohio, N. S., 588, and several others from other states.

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Related

Sampeyreac and Stewart v. United States
32 U.S. 222 (Supreme Court, 1833)
Gautier v. Franklin
1 Tex. 732 (Texas Supreme Court, 1846)
Bender v. Crawford
33 Tex. 745 (Texas Supreme Court, 1871)
Dash v. Van Kleeck
7 Johns. 477 (New York Supreme Court, 1811)
McCowan v. Davidson
43 Ga. 480 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Posey 49, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgregor-v-goldammer-texcommnapp-1880.