Robison v. Banks

17 Ga. 211
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
DocketNo. 40
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 Ga. 211 (Robison v. Banks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robison v. Banks, 17 Ga. 211 (Ga. 1855).

Opinion

By the Court.

Penning, J.

delivering the opinion.

The Court below decided, that the levy of a certified subpoena-account on land, is a matter which cannot be reached by affidavit of illegality. This decision is the first assigned as erroneous.

A part of the thirty-second section of the Judiciary Act of 1799, is as follows: “In all cases where execution shall issue [213]*213‘illegally, and the person against whom such- execution may be, shall make oath thereof, and shall state the causes of such-illegality, such Sheriff shall return’the same to-the next term of the Court out of which the same issued,, which Court shall determine thereon, at such term.” (Cobb’s Dig. 509.)

The word “ issue,” in this section, has always, to the best of the knowledge and information of this- Court, been considered and treated as having the sense of the word- proceed. That is? , the sense which the word is assumed to- have by the rule of' Court which has reference to the affidavit of illegality, for the only ease which that rule provides for, is a case in- which the-illegality consists, not in the execution’s having issued illegally, but in its proceeding illegally, though it was issued legally. It is the case in which, notwithstanding that a payment has been made on the execution, the execution is proceeding, as if no payment had been made on it. The rule is in these words: “ When an affidavit of illegality is made, on account of partial payment made on the execution, the defendant, at- the time of making such affidavit, must pay up the amount he admits to be due, or the Sheriff shall proceed to raise the amount, and accept the affidavit for the balance.”

The reason why the word, to “issue” has been thus treated as having the sense of the word to proceed, is, perhaps, twofold-first, the word was probably used in that sense in the Acts from which it was, by the Judiciary Act of 1799, adopted, viz: the Judiciary Acts of 1792, 1796? 1797. Secondly, the Statute using the word is a remedial one, and was intended, in all likelihood, to furnish a substitute for the remedy by audita querala — a remedy that lies for a man in execution, or in danger of it, when he has matter, in fact or in writing, to avoid such execution, and no other means to take advantage of it; that is, a remedy as much for matters arising after the issuing of the execution, as for matters arising after the judgment, but before the issuing of the execution. (Wat. Dig. 485, 616, 631.)

[1.] All this being so, it is too late, now, for Courts to inter[214]*214pose and say that the word shall be no longer taken in the sense of the word proceed.

Taken, then, in the sense of that word, the decision of the Court below was wrong; for the Statute which turns a certified subpoena-account into an execution, the Judiciary Statute of 1799 authorizes such an execution to be levied of “goods and ■chattels” only, and the certified subpoena-account, in this case, was proceeding to be levied of land.

[2.] The charge of the Court below, that Banks, the witness, having proven his attendance by his affidavit, the same was evidence for him until disproven, we understand as amounting to no more than a statement to the Jury, that the subpoena-accounts, in their certified condition, were prima facie evidence of the correctness of the claim of Banks. And this they certainly were.

[3.] Section twenty-one of the Judiciary Act of 1799, is as follows: “ When a subpoena shall be served on any witness, in ■conformity to this Act, it shall be the duty of such person so summoned, to attend, from time to time, until the cause in which such witness shall have been summoned, is tried or be otherwise discharged by the Court.” Duty to attend from time to time until discharged, means duty to be present, in Court, from time time, until discharged. If, therefore, a witness is not present in Court when the case is postponed or continued, and so fails to hear the announcement of such postponement or continuance, it is his own fault; and he is not justified in attending afterwards and charging for his attendance.

The witness, therefore, in this case, was not justified in charging for attendance rendered after the announcement made by the Court, that the cases in which he was summoned would not be tried; and so we think the Court below should have told the Jury.

Is a witness, attending under subpoenas in different cases, at the instance of the same person, he a party in all of those cases, entitled to charge full fees in each case ? The Court below told the Jury that a witness is. And we think, told ■them properly.

[215]*215The Fees Bill Act of 1792 says: “To each "witness’per day,, for his or her attendance, for coming and returning, allowing-30 miles for a day, not allowing for more than three witnesses-to be paid by the person: summoning the same, and taxed :in the bill of costs 75” (cents.) By the Act of 1839 seventy-five cents a day is raised, for Muscogee County, to one dollar and fifty cents. (Cobb’s Dig. 353. Acts of 1839, 141.)

“ Taxed in the bill of costs,” must mean taxed in the bill of' costs of the case in which the witness may have been subpoened. In every case there is a bill of costs. If, therefore, there are more cases in which the witness has been subpoened than one, there will be more bills of costs in which hisy?er diem is to be taxed than one.

The party, then, that summons a witness in more cases than one, has the right, if he gains the cases, to tax his adversary with full fees for the witness, in each case. But if he has the right to tax his adversary with full fees in each case, it must be because he, himself, was under obligation, in the first instance, to pay the witness full fees in each case; that is to say, it must be because the witness, in such a state of things, is entitled to fie paid full fees in each case.

And if in such a state of things the witness is entitled to be .paid full fees in each case; that is to say, in a- state of things in which the party calling him has the. right to tax ■his adversary with the fees, then the witness is entitled to be paid them in each case in any and every state of things: -for there-is no law from which it can be presumed that the Legislature intended that the amount of compensation to a witness, was ever tobegreater, if the party calling the witness should gain the case,, and so acquire the right to tax his adversary with such compensation, than it was to be if that party should lose his case. On the contrary, there is law from which it is to be inferred, that the Legislature intended the fees of a witness to be the same, whether the party calling him should gain his case or should lose, it. The Act of 1792, gives the witness the right to-make out his account for attendance, on the last day of his attendance in each .term. And it may, and frequently.does hap[216]*216pen, that such day comes before that of the termination of the suit, and so, before it can be known which party will succeed — which fail. (Cobb’s Dig. 277.)

[4.] The result, then, seems to be, that a witness is entitled to charge the party which has summoned him, full fees for each case in which he may have been summoned.

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

Related

Smith v. Nelson
65 P. 485 (Utah Supreme Court, 1901)
O'Kane v. People
46 Ill. App. 225 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1892)
Meagher v. Van Zandt
18 Nev. 230 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1884)
Meffert v. Dubuque, B. & M. R. R.
34 Iowa 430 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ga. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robison-v-banks-ga-1855.