Knight v. Norton

*338After a continuance for advisement, the opinion of the Court was drawn up by

Si-iepley J.

The acts for the relief of poor debtors have been so numerous and so defective in their provisions, that it is no matter of surprise, that they have been the occasion of many suits. The act of 1835, c. 195, provided, that a debtor arrested or imprisoned on execution upon giving bond conditioned, that within six months he would cite the creditor and submit himself to examination and take the oath prescribed by the tenth section, or pay the debt, interest, costs and fees, should be discharged; but no express provision was made to whom the bond should be taken, nor was any mode pointed out for citing the creditor, nor any authority given to notify his agent or attorney in case of his not being a resident within the State. The design of the act of 1836, c. 245, seems to have been among other things to provide a remedy for these defects. And the fourth section provides, that the bond required by the eighth section of the act of 1835, shall run to the creditor; and the fifth section provides, that any person arrested or imprisoned on any execution, or warrant for taxes, by the giving the bond referred to in the fourth section, which is the same required by the eighth section of the act of 1835, shall be discharged; and that the debtor giving bond as aforesaid may cite the creditor and take the oath provided in the seventh section, which oath is substituted for that contained in the tenth section of the act of 1835. How is the debtor to cite the creditor ? The only provision in reference to it is in the same fifth section in these words, “ and in other respects complying with the provisions of the ninth and tenth sections of the act to which this is supplementary.”' The ninth section referred to provides, that a person committed, and in prison, shall make a written complaint to the keeper, who shall apply to a justice of the peace of the county, by whom the notification is to be made out, which is to be served upon the creditor or his attorney in the manner there provided. The design seems to have been to adopt in all respects the same mode for the application, notice, service, and subsequent proceedings as is provided in cases when the debtor is in prison. And it is practicable to do this, for the debtor will not be obliged to be committed to enable him to make such an application to the keeper to whose custody he should have been commit*339ted, if lfeliad not given the bond.' He has but to present him-' self, being at, large, to the keeper to make the request or complaint, and the statute impliedly at least authorizes the keeper there-jpc|n to proceed as he would if in his custody. In conformity to thei provisions of the tenth section referred to, the certificate that the debitor has taken the oath should be lodged with such prison keeper instead of with the clerk or magistrate issuing the execution.

'In this case the debtor himself applied to the magistrate instead of to the keeper of the jail, and the certificate was lodged with the clerk instead of the prison keeper.

It may be said, that the notice would be equally effectual whether made out upon the application of the debtor, or the prison keeper; and it undoubtedly would be so, and other modes of giving notice equally effectual might be named, but the answer is, those are not the modes provided by the legislature, and the Courts cannot determine, that other modes apparently equally satisfactory, shall be substituted for those, which the law has prescribed.

The preliminary proceedings must be in conformity to the provisions of the statute to give the justices jurisdiction, and authorize then! to act. This appears to have been the intention of that provision in the tenth section, which declares, that the justices shall “ examine the notification and return, and if regular, and in due form, may hear,” implying that if not regular and in due form, they have no authority to proceed. And such was the decision in the case of Putnam v. Longley, 11 Pick. 487.

The case of Agry v. Betts, 3 Fairf. 415, decides that the certificate ¿>f the magistrates is conclusive as to the fact of notice, but not as to the form and regularity of the papers issued.

The irule for assessing damages, adopted in the case of Winthrop v. Dockendorff, 3 Greenl. 156, cannot be applied here. In that case, the statute was considered as authorizing a judgment according to eq.uity and good conscience. The statute of 1835 prescribes in case ot forfeiture of the bond the judgment to be rendered, and leaves the Court, no discretionary power. And although the agreed statemen-t of facts authorizes the Court to make up judgment for such surra as it “ may adjudge due in equity and good conscience,” *340it cannot exercise any power thus granted in violation f nro-visions of the statute.

Judgment for plaiitrijf:

The judgment was directed to be made up by reckoning interest on the ("lcbt only from the judgment to the time of the breach of condition of the and after breach, by reckoning 25 per cent, interest on the debt, costs, and e ui¡i of commitment.

An alteration has been made in the mode of estimating the amount of d. ages on breach of the condition of a poor debtor’s bond, and in the manaei .if citing the creditor, by stat. 1839, c. 3G6, and 412.