Salmon v. Burgess

21 F. Cas. 254, 1 Hughes 356
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 21 F. Cas. 254 (Salmon v. Burgess) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salmon v. Burgess, 21 F. Cas. 254, 1 Hughes 356 (circtedva 1875).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

The question for decision is, whether the court can take notice of fractions of a day, and consider the act-of March 3d, 1875, increasing the tax on tobacco four cents on the pound, as having “taken effect” at 9 o’clock p. m. on that day, according to the fact as admitted in the pleadings and according to the apparent intention of the proviso of the act; or, whether it is bound by . a fiction of the law, which gives a statute efficiency throughout the day on which it is enacted, to construe the statute as having been in force throughout the 3d day of March, 1875. Another fact conceded in the pleadings is, that express instructions have been received by the collector in Richmond, from the commissioner in Washington, to continue to receive .as the tax and issue stamps for tobacco at the rate of 20 cents per pound on that day, and that throughout the business hours of the day those instructions remained in force, and were not revoked until 5 o’clock p. m. Fictions of law are intended merely for convenience, and are now never enforced in prejudice of the right and justice of a case. “Fictio juris neminem Isedere debet.” Many fictions of law which were observed in former times are no longer enforced. It was formerly, for instance, a fiction of law that an act of parliament, passed at any day of a session, related back to and became a law as of the [255]*255first day of the session, if the time for its taking effect were not mentioned in the act itself. A similar fiction was observed as to judgments at law, which were held to relate back and bear date as of the first day of the term of the court at which they were rendered. As to the fiction relating to statutes, it was never abrogated in England until the act of 33 Geo. III. c. 13, when it was enacted by parliament that each act should take effect from the day of its passage, or the day mentioned in the act itself. But this statute was not passed until 1793, and was never in force in the thirteen colonies. It is presumed that most of the states of the Union passed laws similar to the act of Geo. III. just mentioned. Be that as it may, we have to do in the present case only with a law of congress; and the constitution of the United States embodies • provisions restricting the operation of acts of congress to the time of their passage. Article first of that instrument contains two provisions, one of them disabling congress from passing any ex post facto law; and the other declaring that, before a bill shall become a law, it shall have been presented to the president, and either signed by him or passed over his veto by two-thirds of both houses of congress. In point of fact, this approval and signing, by the president, of the act of congress now under consideration, as conceded in the pleadings, did not occur until 9 o’clock p. m. of the 3d of March, 1873, several hours after the close of business in Richmond on that day, and after the tobacco in question had passed from the plaintiff’s control. The question here is, not between different days, as was the question in the cases of Arnold v. U. S., 9 Crunch [13 U. S.] 104, and of Matthews v. Zane, 7 Wheat. [20 U. S.] 164; for counsel on both sides concede that it went into effect on the 3d of March, 1875. But the question here is ¡upon fractions of the same day. It is a fiction of law, applied for convenience, that there are no fractions of a day; but is this fiction to be enforced in spite of the fact admitted upon the record, against express provisions of the constitution of the United States? ' The cases just cited decide that a law of congress must go into operation on the day of its passage, rather than on a day subsequent, a proposition conceded by the plaintiffs. Every act does unquestionably take effect from the day of its passage or the day mentioned in the act itself. The question behind the one decided in 9 Cranch [13 U. S., supra] and 7 Wheat. [20 U. S. supra] is. must every statute be held to cover the whole of the day on which it goes into effect? Is this fiction of law to be enforced in all cases, even when the statute, as in the present instance, itself provides .that it shall not apply to acts committed before its taking effect?

It was conceded by the district attorney rhat the fiction of law in question does not apply to penal statutes. A penal law relating back a half day or a single hour, would be just as positively an ex post facto law as it would be if it related back a whole day, or a month, or a year. A penal law of congress confessedly cannot be enforced against an act committed an hour before the bill making the act penal was signed by the president though on the same day. It is claimed, however, by the district attorney that the rule is different in respect to remedial laws; which latter the law under consideration is not, it being a law imposing a tax and denouncing penalties for the non-payment of the taxes it imposes.

Such a concession as that mentioned would | seem fatal, therefore, to the present defence; for this law of the 3d of March, 1875, must be construed in the same way as to all its features. Otherwise, we are reduced to the alternative of construing its penal provisions as having taken effect at 9 o’clock p. m. of a certain day, and its provisions not penal as having taken effect twenty-one hours beforehand, which construction would be absurd. The law is an entirety. If. as to its penal features, it cannot be held to have gone into effect until 9 p. m. of the day of its enactment, neither can it be held to have gone into effect before that hour as to its other provisions. Independently, however, of this latter consideration, the weight of authority seems to me to greatly preponderate in favor of the proposition that the courts may consider fractions of the same day in enforcing statutes.

In Wrangham v. Hersey. 3 Wils. 274, the court remarked: “It is said there is no fraction of a day, but this is a fiction in law, ‘Fictio juris neminem lsedere debet’. ... By fiction of law the whole term, the whole assizes, and the whole session of parliament may be, and sometimes are, considered as one day, yet the matter of fact shall overturn the fiction, in order to do justice between the parties.”-

In Combe v. Pitt, 3 Burrows, 1433, Lord Mansfield said: “Notwithstanding the general fiction of the whole term being but one day. yet when the priority of action becomes essential and necessary to be ascertained, the particular day must be shown. . . . But though the law does not, in general, allow of the fraction of a day, yet it admits it in eases where it is necessary to distinguish. And I do not see why the very hour may not be so, too. where it is necessary, and can be done, for it is not like a mathematical point which cannot be divided.”

Judge Kent says (1 Comm. 455): “It cannot be admitted that a statute shall, by any fiction or relation, have any effect before it was actually passed. A retroactive statute would partake in its character of the mis-chiefs of an ex post facto law as to all cases of crimes and penalties, and in every other case relating to contracts or property it would be against every sound princijfie.”

In Re Ankrim [Case No. 395], Justice Me-[256]*256Lean, of the supreme court of the United States, said in circuit court: “It is unaccountable that the construction (that every statute begins to have effect, unless a time for its commencement is therein mentioned, from the first day of the session of parliament in which it is made) should have been continued by the English courts down to the year 1772. Nothing ccu'.d show more forcib y with what pertinacity enlightened judges adhered to an established construction of the statutes.

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Related

Burgess v. Salmon
97 U.S. 381 (Supreme Court, 1878)

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 254, 1 Hughes 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salmon-v-burgess-circtedva-1875.