Wilder v. Lumpkin

4 Ga. 208
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1848
DocketNo. 27
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 4 Ga. 208 (Wilder v. Lumpkin) 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
Wilder v. Lumpkin, 4 Ga. 208 (Ga. 1848).

Opinion

By the Court

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

A motion was made in this case to dismiss the bill of except tions and writ of error, because the security on the appeal was not made a party. Henry H. Lumpkin had obtained judgment against James Wilder, the plaintiff in error, and his security on the appeal. Wilder brought a writ of error, without joining his security, against whom judgment had passed equally with himself. The reply to the motion to dismiss was an Act of the last Legislature, which declares that, from and after its passage, it shall not be necessary to make securities on the appeal parties to writs of error before this Court. Not only was the judgment of the Circuit Court, upon which error was charged, pronounced before the passage of the Act, but the plaintiff’s suit, upon his writ before this Court, was pending at the time it bears date.

[1.] According to the law, as it stood at the time this writ of error was brought, and at the time the Act of the Legislature' was passed which repealed it, Henry H. Lumpkin had the right to require the security on the appeal to be joined as aparty plaintiff before this Court. He had recovered judgment in the Court below against two defendants, one of whom could not bring the writ. Let it be noted that such was the law, not alone by the decision of this Court, which might be quite sufficient, it being a judgment of the highest judicial tribunal known to the laws of Georgia, — but such was the' law as held by the highest judicial tribunals of our sister States, and by the Supreme Court of the United States. And not only so, but such was the rule by the Common Law, as we adopted it, and therefore as much the law governing the rights of parties, and as obligatory upon this Court as if it had been embodied in the statute which organized it. It was not a mere rule of practice, adopted for convenience, but an established rule of right, obligatory upon the Courts, and the people of this State. A rule, too, founded in reason and good sense. What was the reason of the rule as it existed at Common Law, whence we derived it, as applicable to precisely such a case as is this case 1 I have stated that where a party has judgment against several, he is not compelled at Common Law to join issue [210]*210upon a writ of error brought by one defendant, but may dismiss his writ upon motion. The reason is, “for otherwise this inconvenience would ensue, that every defendant might bring a writ of error by himself, and by that means delay the plaintiff from his executionfor alongtime, and from having any benefit from his judgment, though it might be affirmed once or oftener.” Tidd’s Practice, 1136. Garth. 8. 3 Burrow, 1789. To malte the rule applicable, it is necessary that the defendants be in life and be aggrieved by the judgment. By our law the judgment passes equally against the security on the appeal with his principal,— he is equally bound by it to the plaintiff, — its lien attaches equally upon his property. He is necessarily, therefore, presumed to be, until the contrary appears, aggrieved — and he was in life. By the law, too, organizing this Court, where the judgment of the Court below is for a sum certain, and it is affirmed by this Court, the plaintiff may enter up judgment in the Court below against the defendant and his securities, for principal, interest, costs and damages. Act of 1845, Sect.S. 1 Kelly, 8. This, then, is the case to which the rule applies. To this rule the parties were amenable when this writ was brought. The right which Lumpkin had under that rule, was not to he delayed in the enforcement of his judgment longer than the time necessary to hear and determine one writ of error by all the defendants. If the late Act of the Legislature applies to this case, then of that right he is divested. For that Act, whilst it declares that it shall not be necessary to make securities on the appeal parties to writs of error, does not inhibit the security from bringing his several writ, and thus subjects the plaintiff to the very wrong from which he was protected by the Common Law. In support of the rule, as established by this Court, see farther : 6 Go. 25. Gro. Eliz. 648-9. Yelv. 4. 3 Mod. 134. 1 Ld. Raymond, 71, 151. 5 Mod. 16, 69. Garth. 367. Gomh. 351. Holt, 54. 1 Ld. Raymond, 244. Garth. 404. 1 Salk. 319. 5 Mod. 358. 6 Mod. 40. 1 Stra. 231. 1 ibid, 606. 8 Mod. 305. Gas. Tern. Hardee, 135. 6 Barnes, 202. lWils. 88. 2 Hunf Sf East, 737. 2 Kelly, 440, 441.

The Legislature did not, as we think, intend this Act to have any retroactive effect. It is in the following words : “ Be it enacted, &c., that from and after the passage of this Act, it shall in no case be considered as necessary to join, with the parties to the suit of the Superior Court, carrying a case from there up to the Su[211]*211preme Court by bills of exception and writs of error, the security on appeals, or any injunction bond.”

“ Section 2. That no writ of error shall be dismissed or delayed in its hearing and decision, where the parties to the writ or declaration below are included in said writ of error.”

If it had been the intention of the Legislature to cause this Act to retrospect, or to embrace cases pending, we have a right to presume that they would have so declared. It is not to be presumed that they would have left the exercise of so dangerous a power — a power the exercise of which has been so rarely attempted — to conjecture or construction. That they did contemplate retrospective operation is negatived by the fact, that by the terms of the Act, it is made to take effect from and after its date. It does not differ from any other Act which declares what the law shall be. It is prospective, and as such this Court will give it full effect.

A distinction is sometimes sought to be drawn between a declaratory statute and one which enacts a new rule of law. The former being considered by some as free from the objections which so justly lie against retroactive laws in general. If not obnoxious to the same, it is to equally fatal objections. If a statute or a principle of the Common Law be of such doubtful import —if its meaning be so obscure as to constitute no intelligible rule of action, and the Legislature undertakes to give an exposition of it, then such exposition amounts to one of two things — either a new rule or a judicial construction of an existing rule. If the former, it is, as I shall undertake to show, without retrospective effect, and if the latter, it is the exercise of a power which belongs to the Legislature of no free country — which most assuredly does not belong to the Legislature of Georgia. By the fundamental principles upon which our political system is founded, all the departments of the Government are distinct — their powers are defined with careful exactness — their boundaries are marked with precision and clearness. It is necessary to the entire system that each should be confined to its proper sphere, and that no one should infringe the rightful functions of others. This separation and independence of the legislative, judicial and executive departments, is the chief glory and distinguishing excellence of the free institutions under which it is our happiness to live. Upon the judiciary devolves, more than upon any other branch of the [212]

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ga. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilder-v-lumpkin-ga-1848.