Parsons v. Russell

11 Mich. 113, 1863 Mich. LEXIS 2
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 11 Mich. 113 (Parsons v. Russell) 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
Parsons v. Russell, 11 Mich. 113, 1863 Mich. LEXIS 2 (Mich. 1863).

Opinion

Martin Ch. J.:

The constitutionality of the Boat and Vessel Law is the first question to be considered in this case, for if the law be found to be unconstitutional the plaintiffs have no standing in Court, and all the minor questions raised by [121]*121the record are unimportant. It is contended by tbe defendants that the law violates that provision of the Constitution which declares that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.

Whatever may be the difficulty of defining this phrase of the Constitution when sought to be applied to other proceedings, when used in relation to those of a judicial-character it is evidently, and has been so universally held,, intended to secure to the citizen the right to a trial, according to the forms of law of the questions of his liability and responsibility, before his person or his property shall be condemned. Judicial action is in such cases-imperatively required, and “implies and includes actor, reusy judex — regular allegations, opportunity to answer, and trial, according to some settled course of judicial proceedings.” While we adopt the common law, or, to speak more accurately, so long as we recognize and submit to it, we-recognize and adopt the fundamental principle that no -mgr» shall be party and judge in his own ease: that if tried it it shall be by his peers, and if deprived of liberty or property it shall be by impartial judicial authority, after a trial and judgment under general laws. The right to enforce private rights must necessarily be through the intervention of courts.of justice, and in the enforcement of contracts, at the least, a trial by jury, or according to some universally established practice of courts, has always been guaranteed to determine the respective rights and liabilities of the parties, and property has been protected from sale until these rights and liabilities have been judicially ascertained and determined. The Boat and Vessel Law ignores this principle, and confers upon a claimant a right to condemn and sell a boat or vessel, upon his bare assertion of a debt or demand, without requiring any proof to substantiate it to be made before any judicial tribunal, or requiring any jrrdgment or decree of such tribunal to be made after a trial or investigation of the demand. Thus a vessel may [122]*122be sold -upon an assertion of tbe existence of a demand, which may be absolutely false and unfounded. Certainly the spirit and genius of our laws, as well as the letter of the Constitution, will not tolerate this outrage upon the rights of property. The law gives no hearing to the defendant until the whole property is disposed of, and if no debts are established, the consequences are just the same as if they had been. In either event he is deprived of his property, and this before trial and judgment. The vessel owner has no means of maintaining his property, although there may be no shadow of a claim against him. It is no answer that he may bond it, for by reason of absence, or other cause, he may be in neither the position or condition to do so. The whole proceeding to the sale may be conducted in his absence, or without his knowledge. The .statute does not require personal service to be made, or attempted to be made upon him or any person. It is in the nature of a proceeding in rem, and a condemnation of the property before trial and judgment; the consequences of which can not be obviated by any judicial act.

There -is no analogy between this case and those of the sale of property for non-payment of taxes, or other revenue purpose, for this is really the act of the creditor or claimant, while the other is the act of the government in the exercise of pre-eminent sovereignty to which all other rights are subordinate; a right necessary for the protection and preservation of the government: neither is that the exercise of a judicial right or form; and to this alone is our attention directed in this case. Nor is there any analogy between this law, and that authorizing the sale of perishable property seized under the attachment law; as in the latter case the judgment or order of a court is 'requisite before a sale can be made. A sale of perishable property is only allowed to prevent the loss which would necessarily accrue from not selling; and the object is to protectj,the rights of all parties by a resort to the only mode to obtain any bene[123]*123ficial use from the property. In this case of the sale of perishable property pendente Ute, and in every instance of the exercise of such a power within,my recollection of the authorities, Such power is exercised upon the order of a court of competent jurisdiction before which the parties are, or may be, heard, and after due notice.

But the effect of this law is the absolute destruction of the title and right of the owner of the boat or vessel ■against which proceedings are instituted, by the ex parte act of one claiming to have a demand which is by law declared to be a lien upon such boat or vessel. That the law may declare any and all contractors for the building, furnishing and supplying vessels to have liens upon such vessels by reason thereof, is not questioned; but we deny that the law thereby makes the contractor a judge in his own case, so far as to enable him to divest the owner of his property, through the ministerial acts of a Circuit Court Commissioner, or a Judge at chambers, without judicial investigation and determination of his right and the consequent liability of the vessel or its owner.

Holding the law in this respect to be unconstitutional, the judgment is affirmed, with costs.

Christiancy and Campbell JJ. concurred.

Manning J.:

I can not agree with my brethren in holding the statute or any part of it unconstitutional.

It has long been on our statute book. It is not a new law just enacted. It made its first appearance in our State in the Revision of 1846. From that time to the present — ■ sixteen years and upwards — it has been regarded by our courts and parties having occasion to act under it as the W of the State. Questions have frequently arisen under It, some of which have been brought to this Court for ■adjudication. Lawson v. Higgins, 1 Mich. 225; Bidwell [124]*124v. Whittaker, 1 Mich. 469; Watkins v. Atkinson, 2 Mich, 151; Truesdale v. Hazzard, 2 Mich. 344; Turner v. Lewis, 2 Mich. 350; Ward v. Wilson, 3 Mich. 1; and Wight v. Maxwell, 4 Mich. 45, are eases of this description. In each of these as in the case before us the action was on a bond given under the statute to release the vessel. In no one of them was the constitutionality of the statute questioned.

As every statute is presumed to be constitutional, there must be a period in the existence of a statute when that presumption becomes conclusive by lapse of time, the accumulation of rights under it, and its recognition by the judiciary.

In Stuart v. Laird, 1 Cranch, 299, it was objected that the Judges of the Supreme Court of the United States could not hold the Circuit Courts, under the Constitution. The Court say: “ To this objection, which is of recent date, it is sufficient to observe that practice and acquies-’ cence under it for a period of several years, commencing with the organization of. the judicial system, affords an irresistable answer, and has indeed fixed the construction.”

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Bluebook (online)
11 Mich. 113, 1863 Mich. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-russell-mich-1863.