Welborn v. Akin

44 Ga. 420
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 Ga. 420 (Welborn v. Akin) 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
Welborn v. Akin, 44 Ga. 420 (Ga. 1871).

Opinions

Lochrane, Chief Justice.

This was an action brought by Warren Akin against C. B. Welborn, upon a note for $1,602 15, dated December 16th, 1868, with a credit of $42 33, September 14th, 1869. When this case was called upon the docket, counsel for defendant objected to its being taken up out of the regular call of the docket, “upon the ground that an issuable defense had been filed under oath under the provisions of the Relief Act of 1871; and that, not expecting said case to be disposed of until reached on the regular call of the docket, he was not then prepared for the argument and trial of the issues raised by said plea.” This objection the Judge overruled and went on with the case, and this constitutes the first exception and assignment of error.

Defendant’s counsel further objected to any further proceedings being had, on the ground that said cause was not ready for trial, because no affidavit, as required by law, had been filed under the 12th section and other sections of the [423]*423Relief Act of 1870, which was overruled by the Court, aud forms the second exception in this case.

The plaintiff then moved to strike defendant’s plea because the Act was unconstitutional, which the Court sustained, “and ordered the plea tobe stricken on said ground,” which was excepted to.

The Court inquired if there was any other defense. It Was answered that, expecting the defense filed to be sufficient, and that the case could not be reached upon a regular call of the docket, he had not consulted his client and did not know. Plaintiff stating there was none, the Court granted the following judgment :

“There being no issuable defense filed on oath in this case, judgment is rendered in the cause for the plaintiff’s defendant for $>1,602 15, as principal, $>116 44, as interest, and ......for costs of suit.” 7th November, 1870.

At the same term of the Court, a motion to set aside the judgment was made upon several grounds, and an answer to the rule nisi made by plaintiff. After hearing the question, the Judge refused to set aside the judgment, and this is excepted to and assigned as error.

1. The first ground of error which we will notice is the manner in which the Judge disposed of this ease and the plea filed. If the plea filed was not sufficient to have invoked the interposition of a jury, then the manner of calling the case, as certified to by the Judge, was not error. In disposing of the business of the Court, the rule laid down was a commendable one, the only question being whether the Judge was right in not regarding the plea as a defense to this action. Let us first examine the plea :

“And now comes the said defendant by his attorney, Hammond & Welborn, and says that the note sued on in this case was given in renewal of a contract made prior to the first day of June, 1865, and this he is ready to verify. Defendant further says, that in consequence of the late war against the United States, he suffered losses to the amount of [424]*424$2,000 00 by the destruction of property, and this he is ready to verify,” etc. This plea was sworn to and filed in proper form.

This plea was intended, by the pleadings, to put in issue the rights of the parties and their respective equities, under the Relief Act of 1870. It was sworn to, and, by its face, presented the fact that the note sued on was in renewal of a contract made before 1st June, 1865. The regularity, therefore, of this proceeding, in holding this to be no plea, was based, as the Judge declares it, upon his idea, that the Act itself was unconstitutional. Under the law of 1870, the plea put in issue, under the oath of the party, the fact that this note was given in renewal of a contract, made before the 1st June, 1865. If it did, then what consequences followed it, under the law? Why, that it was the duty of the party claiming a judgment upon such contract, to show the Court that he had paid the legal taxes required. If it was a debt upon which tax was not due, or if, in fact, it was not a renewal, the Court could not decide the latter question, of his own motion, for facts put in issue may have properly invoked a trial by jury. It is evident that the Court, in this case, treated the Act of 1870 as a nullity — as no law — and, in striking defendant’s plea, it is so recited as the ground of his judgment. This Court has held one provision of that Act constitutional, and we need not reiterate the views and reasons which have induced the Court to that conclusion. Suffice it to say, we have held that it was within the Constitutional powers of the Legislature to exact from plaintiffs, before they invoked the powers, processes and aid of the Courts, to pay their taxes due the State. The contracts upon which the suit was instituted, is not impaired by any direct legislation. It is left just as it was. All that the law requires of the plaintiff is to pay his debt due the State. This seems to be as reasonable that he should pay his debt, as that others should pay their debts to him. We cannot see why it [425]*425is unconstitutional for him to pay, if it is constitutional to make his debtor pay.

But it is said that the Act requiring an affidavit that the taxes due have been paid, is ex post facto. The clause of the Federal, Constitution relating to ex post' facto laws, applies to criminal laws only, is the language of the Supreme Court of the United States, in 17 Howard, 284. And in 16 Georgia Eeports, 102, Judge Lumpkin says the phrase, ex post facto, in the Constitution, extends to criminal and not to civil cases. As this law inflicts no punishment, and is not a penal law against crime, it is useless to discuss the proposition. If the question be raised that it is retrospective in its operation, then our laws abound with retrospective statutes, and Judge Lumpkin recites a good many in the decisions, in 16 Georgia, “ imposing penalties upon banks refusing to redeem their notes on demand, in specie,” giving priority to the payment of debts due cestui que trusts, whether the trust debt was contracted before or after those due other creditors, and others which, he says, “have been adjudged to be constitutional by the Courts,” etc. Thus we see, without multiplying authority, that retrospective acts, even imposing penalties, are not to be regarded as ex post facto, and thus this objection falls upon the authority of the Supreme Court of the United States, and this Court.

Again, it is argued that, as no affidavit was required at the time the note was made, it is unconstitutional now to impose this duty. In Bell vs. the Corporation of Vicksburg, an affidavit, required by the Statutes of Mississippi to a plea, which applied to debts or contracts entered into before the statute was recognized by the Supreme Court of the United States as valid and binding, and a demurrer to a plea filed without the affidavit, was held to be bad. Thus, the requirement of an affidavit was, by Judge Campbell, one of the ablest jurists who ever adorned the Supreme Bench of the United States, not regarded any unconstitutional requirement. [426]*426There is nothing literally objectionable in the direction of the Legislature.

Now, it is a demonstration that the Act is not ex post fado, and that requiring an affidavit to be made, not required by the law at the time of the contract, is constitutional.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Ga. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welborn-v-akin-ga-1871.