Young v. . Davis

108 S.E. 630, 182 N.C. 200, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 206
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 19, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 108 S.E. 630 (Young v. . Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. . Davis, 108 S.E. 630, 182 N.C. 200, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 206 (N.C. 1921).

Opinion

HoKE, J.

Chapter 156, Laws 1919, entitled An Act to Provide, a More Speedy Determination of Hncontested Eights and Actions upon *202 Bills, Notes, Bonds, and other Forms of Indebtedness, and duly ratified 7 March, 1919, makes provision in effect that in all such actions, summons may be returnable before the clerk on the first Monday in the month, and judgments by default rendered on the second Monday, provided such summons is issued more than ten days before any first Monday, a duly verified complaint is filed at time of issue setting forth a cause of action of the kind specified, a copy of same being “served on defendant at time of service,” and the defendant shall neglect or fail to file a verified answer, raising material issues before said second Monday.

In chapter 304 of the same session, ratified 11 March, 1919, the Legislature made provision as to the procedure in civil actions generally, the first three sections of which are as follows :

“SeotioN 1. The summons in all civil actions in the Superior Court shall be made returnable before the clerk at a date named therein, not less than ten days nor more than twenty days from the issuance of said writ, and shall be served as now provided by law.
“Sec. 2. The complaint shall be filed on or before the return day of the summons: Provided, for good cause shown the clerk may extend the time to a day certain.
“Sec. 3. The answer or demurrer shall be filed within twenty days after the return day, or, if the time is extended for filing the complaint, then the defendant shall have twenty days after the date fixed for such extension: Provided, for good cause shown the clerk may extend the time for filing the answer or demurrer.”

The statute containing extended and further provisions affecting procedure not specially relevant to the questions presented.

At the Special Session 1920, ch. 96, the same Legislature enacted a statute which, in section 1 purports in express terms to amend “Chapter 304 of the Laws of 1919,” and which makes extended provision affecting procedure in civil causes, providing among other things that the “Summons in all civil actions in the Superior Court shall be made returnable before the clerk at a date named therein, not less than ten nor more than twenty days from the issuance of the writ; that the complaint shall be filed on or before the return day of the summons (unless the time is extended) and that the answer or demurrer shall be filed within twenty days after return day (unless time is extended),” etc.

After making, as stated, additional regulations affecting procedure in the civil causes to which it may refer, this statute closes with the following repealing clause: “That all of that part of ch. 304, Public Laws of North Carolina Session 1919, not included and rewritten in this act, and all other laws and clauses of laws in conflict with this act are hereby repealed.”

*203 Upon tbis, a sufficient statement to a proper apprehension of tbe questions presented, we are of opinion that tbis chapter 96 of the Special Session 1920, did not have the effect of repealing chapter 156 of the regular session of 1919, which in terms applied only to actions to enforce moneyed demands of specified kind, but the same is still in force as a permissive and selective method of procedure in the class of actions to which it refers. Speaking generally, it is recognized that in the construction of statutory law there is a presumption against inconsistency, and when there are two or more statutes on the same subject in the same or successive legislatures, in the absence of an express repealing clause, they are to be harmonized and each and every part allowed significance if this can be done by fair and reasonable interpretation. In further elucidation of the position it is said in Black on Interpretation of Laws, 328-329 :

“Where a statute contains both a general enactment and also specific or particular provisions the effort must be, in the first instance, to harmonize all the provisions of the statute by construing all the parts together; and it is only when, on such a construction, the repugnancy of the specific provisions to the general language is plainly manifested, that the intent of the Legislature as declared in the general enacting part is made to give away.”
“A substantially similar rule prevails in cases where the two conflicting provisions are found in different statutes relating to the same subject. It is an established rule in the construction of statutes that a subsequent act, treating a subject in general terms, and not expressly contradicting the provisions of a prior special statute, is not to be considered as intended to affect the more particular and specific provisions of the earlier act, unless it is absolutely necessary so to construe it in order to give its words any meaning at all. Hence, where there are two acts or provisions, one of which is special and particular, and certainly includes the matter in question, and the other general, which, if standing alone, would include the same matter, and thus conflict with the special act or provision, the special act must be taken as intended to constitute an exception to the general act, as the Legislature is not presumed to have intended a conflict.”

The principle so stated has been approved and applied in authoritative cases on the subject in this and other courts. A. C. L. R. R. v. Brunswick, 1 78 N. C., 254; Rankin v. Gaston, 173 N. C., 683; Hannon v. Power Co., 173 N. C., 520; Bramham v. Durham, 171 N. C., 196; Cecil v. High Point, 165 N. C., 431; Rodgers v. U. S., 185 U. S., 83; Dahnke v. People, 168 Ill., 102; Stockett v. Bird, 18 Md., 102.

*204 As more directly apposite to the facts presented, in Branham v. Durham, it was held that “where there are two acts of the Legislature applicable to the same subject passed at different times at the same session, their provisions are to be reconciled in their interpretation if this can be done by fair and reasonable intendment; but to the extent they are necessarily repugnant the latter shall prevail.”

And in the Cecil case, supra: “Statutes on the same subject matter should be construed together so as to harmonize different portions apparently in conflict and to give to each and every part some significance if this can be done by fair and reasonable interpretation.”

Eecurring to the facts it appears at the regular session the Legislature of 1919 enacted chapter 156, providing that an action could be instituted in a certain class of moneyed demands returnable in ten days to the first Monday in any month, and judgment could be entered on the second Monday thereafter on proper proof made and in case no verified answer raising material issues should be filed — ratified 1 March.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.E. 630, 182 N.C. 200, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-davis-nc-1921.