Ramsay Motor Co. v. Wilson

30 P.2d 482, 47 Wyo. 54, 91 A.L.R. 908, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 1
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1934
Docket1836
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 30 P.2d 482 (Ramsay Motor Co. v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramsay Motor Co. v. Wilson, 30 P.2d 482, 47 Wyo. 54, 91 A.L.R. 908, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 1 (Wyo. 1934).

Opinion

*58 Riner, Justice.

This is a proceeding by direct appeal to review an order of the District Court of Carbon County sustaining a motion of the Ramsay Motor Company, as plaintiff below, respondent here, for leave to amend an attachment affidavit, and denying a motion of J. D. Wilson, as defendant below, appellant in this court, to quash and vacate the attachment phase of the action presently to be mentioned. The parties will generally be referred to hereinafter as they appeared in the trial court, or by their respective names.

*59 On March 10, 1933, the plaintiff brought suit, in the district court aforesaid, to recover from the defendant, the sum of $242.10 on an account. With its petition was filed a precipe for an attachment writ and “affidavit for an attachment” and the usual bond required in such cases. Writ and summons were issued forthwith and, the same day, the sheriff thereunder seized a Chrysler automobile belonging to the defendant, which was duly appraised as required by law. On the 11th day of March, 1933, the defendant filed a bond conditioned to “perform the judgment of the court,” pursuant to the provisions of section 89-3325, Wyo. Rev. St. 1931. On March 25th following, the defendant filed his motion to quash and vacate the attachment proceedings already mentioned, upon the ground that the affidavit aforesaid was fatally defective in that it was sworn to before a notary public who was the attorney representing the plaintif in the cause. This motion was supported by the affidavit of counsel for defendant for the purpose of establishing the truth of the ground thus alleged, and, so far as that matter is concerned, the fact is conceded herein.

April 4, 1933, the plaintiff by motion requested the court for an order permitting it to amend the attachment affidavit by allowing its president to swear to the said affiidavit before another notary public. The several motions of the parties were, in due course, heard by the district court, and on April 26th, following, the order now attacked was entered, disposing of them as herein above recited.

The Ramsay Motor Company has filed in this court a motion to dismiss the appeal taken in the cause, on the ground, in substance, that section 89-4906, Wyo. Rev. St. 1931, states what documents shall appear in the record on appeal, and that an attachment affidavit *60 is not there enumerated as one of such documents; and that, as the appeal is predicated upon an alleged error appearing in this affidavit, the order is not subject to review, under the State law governing direct appeals to this court. The point is argued, in support of this motion, that the only method by which a review of the order in question could be obtained was by proceedings in error.

The statute thus relied upon is to the following effect:

“In civil causes appealed to the supreme court under the provisions of this article, the clerk of the district court shall prepare a record on the appeal which shall .consist of the original or certified copies of the pleadings, motions, demurrers, instructions given and refused, verdict and findings, certified copies of the journal entries, including the entry of the judgment or order appealed from, and the notice of the appeal in the cause, securely attached together in their chronological order, and if a transcript of the testimony is prepared and filed, and is brought up on the appeal, the transcript with the exhibits and documentary evidence contained therein or attached thereto as a part thereof, shall also form a part of the record on appeal. When so prepared, the whole of such record shall be paged and numbered consecutively, and shall be certified to by the clerk of the district court as true and correct and filed in his office; and the specifications of error, when filed, shall be authenticated by the certificate of said clerk and attached to the record by him and shall thereupon become a part of the record.”

It is obvious that the plaintiff relies upon the well-known rule of statutory construction often applied by courts, in determining the effect to be given the language of legislative enactments, viz., “expressio unius est exclusio alterius,” i. e., the expression of one thing is the exclusion of another. However, concerning the use of that maxim, the authorities have appropriately *61 pointed out that it should be employed advisedly, and that it does not have universal application.

Concerning it, 59 C. J. 984, 985, upon authority of an extended list of cases, says “The maxim should be applied only as a means of discovering the legislative intent, and should never be permitted to defeat the plainly indicated purpose of the legislature.” In Colquhoun v. Brooks, Law Rep. (1887), 19 Q. B. D. 400-408, Judge Wills remarked:

“I may observe that the method of construction sum-marised in the maxim ‘Expressio unius exclusio alter-ius’ is one that certainly requires to be watched. Perhaps few so-called rules of interpretation have been more frequently misapplied and stretched beyond their due limits. The failure to make the ‘expressio’ complete very often arises from accident, very often from the fact that it never struck the draftsman that the thing supposed to be excluded needed specific mention of any kind.”

On review of this case, Law Rep. (1888), 21 Q. B. D. 52-65, in the Court of Appeals, the following language was used by Lopes, L. J.:

“The maxim ‘Expressio unius, exclusio alterius,’ has been pressed upon us. I agree with what is said in the Court below by Wills, J., about this maxim. It is often a valuable servant, but a dangerous master to follow in the construction of statutes or documents. The exclusio is often the result of inadvertence or accident, and the maxim ought not to be applied, when its application, having regard to the subject-matter to which it is to be applied, leads to inconsistency or injustice.”

Discussing the effect to be given this maxim, in City of St. Louis v. Baskowitz, 273 Mo. 543, 201 S. W. 870, 873, the court said:

“It is the position of counsel for appellant that since this charter provision has in express terms granted to the city of St. Louis the power to license and tax certain enumerated occupations and business, its power *62 is thereby limited, and it cannot tax any other occupation or business, and that the use of the general language found in the charter, which we have italicized, following the particular powers enumerated, does not extend its power to license any other occupation. That is a general canon of statutory construction, as shown by the authorities cited, but it has its well-known exception's, the same as most other general rules, and one of them is that where the language of the statute upon its face clearly shows a contrary intention, in such a case the intention of the lawmaker must prevail over the bare legal inference which is to be drawn from the enumeration of the specific powers granted. In other words, the maxim ‘Expressio unius est exclusio'alter-ius’ has no application where the statute upon its face clearly conveys a contrary intention of the Legislature.”

The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in Simmons v.

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Bluebook (online)
30 P.2d 482, 47 Wyo. 54, 91 A.L.R. 908, 1934 Wyo. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsay-motor-co-v-wilson-wyo-1934.