Mitchell v. Cowgill

4 Binn. 20, 1811 Pa. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 11, 1811
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 Binn. 20 (Mitchell v. Cowgill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Cowgill, 4 Binn. 20, 1811 Pa. LEXIS 40 (Pa. 1811).

Opinion

Tilghman C. J.

This is an action of debt for the penalty of 50?. brought by the plaintiff against the defendant a justice of the peace, for marrying his daughter under the age of twenty-one years without his consent, coutrary to the act of 14th February 1729. The Court of Common Pleas ordered a non pros to be entered, because the plaintiff had not given notice to the defendant previous to the commencement of the action, agreeably to the act of 21st March 1772. Two questions arise. 1. Whether notice was necessary? 2. Whether the notice given by the plaintiff was sufficient?

1. The act directs that “ no writ shall be sued out against, nor any copy of any process served on, any justice of the peace, for anything by him done in the execution of his office, until notice in writing of such intended writ or process, shall have been delivered to him, or left at the usual place of his abode by the party, his attorney or agent, who intends to sue or cause the same to be sued out, or served, at least thirty days before the suing out or serving the same, in which notice shall be clearly and explicitly contained, the cause of action, which the said party hath, &c.” This act should be liberally construed for the protection of justices of the peace, who are not often lawyers, and are frequently called on to act in the discharge of their duty, without an opportunity of taking advice. It is but reasonable, that they should have time to reflect, and to make amends to the person injured, in case they should inadvertently do wrong. This is an encouragement to the magistrate, and no injury to the party complaining. The defendant is sued for marrying the plaintiff’s daughter. Was this an act in the execution of his office ? It certainly was, for justices are authorized to sign certificates of marriage by the act of 1700. Then why should not notice be necessary? Because, say the plaintiff’s counsel, the act of assembly directing notice to be given, authorizes the justice, at any time within thirty days after notice, to tender amends to the party complaining. They infer, that an action for a penalty is not within the act, because in such case there can be no amends, the plaintiff being entitled to *the whole penalty. Besides, they consider the justice in the light of an offender against a penal [23]*23statute, and therefore not within the protection of the law. Strictly speaking I do not know, that there can be any tender of amends. But at least, there may be a tender of the penalty, which would save the costs of suit, and that would be an advantage to the justice. Besides, his character and his feelings may be interested in preventing a suit. As to his being an offender, there is no weight in the remark; the law may be broken very innocently, by marrying a person under the age of twenty-one, supposed to be of full age. This is a fact in which the justice is very liable to mistake, for he must derive his knowledge from the report of others. The case therefore appears to me, to be within both the words and the spirit of the act.

2. As to the second point, it is necessary to consider the nature of the notice which was given. It contained a recital of the acts of assembly on which it was founded, and of the injury complained of, and concluded with saying, that “I, as attorney for the said William Mitchell, shall commence a suit against you for the sum of 50i., in the name, and for the use of the said William Mitchell, for that you contrary to the said act of assembly did marry his daughter under the age of twenty-one years, &c.” It is not denied that here was clear and explicit notice of the cause of action in express terms, and I think there was by direct implication notice of an intended writ, because we have no way of commencing a suit but by writ. The objection to the notice is, that it makes no mention of the kind of writ or the kind of action. The act of assembly does not require notice of the kind of action but of the cause of action; nor does it in express terms require notice of the kind of writ, but of such intended writ or process. We have but two kinds of writs, a capias and a summons. It could not be material to the defendant to know which of these was intended. But it was very material to be informed that a writ was to be issued against him, and of the cause for which it was to be issued. This was all that was necessary, to enable him to consider whether he had done wrong, and whether he had not better prevent the suit by offering satisfaction. It was the intention of the legislature to furnish the justice, with such substantial information as should enable him to his conduct *with prudence, and not to impose such difficulties on the party complaining as might defeat his action on nice and captious objections. This is the light in which the act of assembly strikes me, and if the subject was entirely new, I think it would not be doubted that the notice was sufficient. But it appears that our act is drawn in [24]*24the same words as -the English statute of 24 Geo. 2 ch. 44, the construction of which is supposed to have been fixed by the case of Strickland v. Ward, 7 Term Rep. 631, 633, in notis, determined by Justice Yeates at Nisi Prius in the year 1767. It was an action of trespass and false imprisonment against a justice, for committing the defendant for returning to the parish whence he bad been removed. The plaintiff had given a notice, in which was contained the cause of action, and it was added that an action on the case for imprisonment and assault would be brought, but the action brought, was trespass vi et armis and not case. The variance between the notice, and the action brought, might be a reason for the decision in that case; because the justice might have omitted to tender amends, perceiving by the notice, that the plaintiff could not support his action. There is that material difference between the case of Strickland v. Ward, and that which we are now to decide. It is sufficient therefore to say that the cases are different, and we find no other adjudged case on the subject prior to the revolution, and of course none that is an authority in this Court. What the English adjudications since have been, it is not material to inquire. I believe they have given their statute a very strict construction, much stricter than the circumstances of this country require. In England, where various kinds of writs aud process are in-use in the different courts, there may be some reason for particularizing the kind of writ intended to be sued out. But our writs are so few, and our process so simple, that the defendant can derive very little advantage from a precise mention of them. I am therefore of opinion that the notice in this case was sufficient.

Yeates J.

Two exceptions have been taken to the opinion of the Court of Common Pleas delivered on the trial.

The first is, that in a suit brought against a justice of the for taking him to join in marriage a minor under *the tuition or ^er parent, without the consent of such parent living within the state, and who can be consulted with, no written notice is necessary under the provisions of the first section of the act of 21st March 1772. 1 Eal. St. Laws, 604. The words are, “no writ shall be sued out against, nor any copy of any process at the suit of a subject shall be served on, any justice of the peace, for any thing by him done in the execution of his office, until notice in writing, of such intended writ or process

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lowrie v. Verner
3 Watts 317 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1834)
Wise v. Wills
2 Rawle 208 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1828)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Binn. 20, 1811 Pa. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-cowgill-pa-1811.