Holland v. Brown

By the Court.

Penning, J.

delivering the opinion.

Was the Court right in over-ruling the motion to dismiss the affidavit of illegality? This is the first question.

[1] The proceeding of the plaintiff was founded upon the Act of 1811, “to point out the mode for the collection of rents.” To find an answer to the question, it is necessary, therefore, to look to that Act.

The first section of the Act is in these words: “Erom and after the passage of this Act, it shall and may be lawful for any person who may hereafter have rent due, where the same does not exceed thirty dollars, to make application to any Justice of the Peace within the district where his, her or their tenant may reside, and obtain from such Justice a distress warrant for the sum claimed, to be due on oath in writing for the said rent—and the same may be levied by any Constable, duly qualified, on any property belonging to said tenant, who shall advertise and sell the same under the same rules and regulations as other sales under execution ; and where any distress shall issue for any sum exceeding thirty dollars, it shall be levied by the Sheriff of said county, advertised and sold', as in cases of *115other executions: Provided, nevertheless, that the party dis-trained, shall be entitled to replevy the goods so distrained, by making oath that the sum or some part thereof distrained for, is mot due, and give security for the eventual condemnation money; and in that case, it shall be the duty .of such officer to return the same to the Court having cognizance of the same, and the same shall be determined by a Jury, as practised in other cases of claim”. (Pr. Dig. 687.)

By this section it is made the duty of the levying officer to “ advertise and sell” the property levied on “ under the same rules and regulations as other sales under execution”, unless “the party distrained” shall replevy the property in a particular way, viz: “ by making oath that the sum, or some part thereof, distrained foi*, is not due, and give security for the eventual condemnation money”. Nothing but this sort of oath and security will excuse the officer for not advertising and selling, as he would have to do in cases of execution. It is only in case this oath and this security are put in, that the officer is-justified in returning the warrant to Court, instead of going on to execute it.

But how is he to go on to execute it ? He is to advertise and sell, says the Act, “ as in .cases of other executions”. But in cases of executions, he is not to sell, if an affidavit of illegality or a claim be interposed. Several special Statutes prescribe to him this course. Does it not follow, then, that he is not to sell under the distress warrant, if an affidavit of illegality or a claim be presented to him ?

It does not. Those Statutes do not apply to the case of a distress warrant, because the Statute aforesaid, authorizing •distress warrants, itself, provides for illegalities .and for claims. The second section provides for the case of the interposition of claims—the first, as we have seen, provides for that of illegalities. And as this provides for only one sort of illegality, that which is put upon the ground that the money distrained for, in whole or in part, is no.t due, it is to be presumed that no other sort was intended to be allowed. Dxpressio unius exolusio alterius.

*116Besides, it may well be doubted whether the expressions, “advertise and sell the same, under the same rules and regulations as ■ other sales under execution”, according to their natural import, include anything but the rules which govern advertisements of - sale, and the rules which govern, were acts of salo—whether the 'receiving of an illegality or of a claim, is a matter which can • naturally be said to interfere with rules of advertisement and .rules of sale; and therefore, whether there is any color for the ' interposition of this affidavit of illegality, even if the Statute • contained nothing, in itself, on the subject of illegality or of ’•claim.

It follows that the Court below erred in not sustaining the motion to dismiss the affidavit of illegality.

[2.] Did the Justice of the Peace have jurisdiction to issue this warrant ?

If he did not, nobody had. The power to issue such a war•rant is not expressly conferred upon the Judges of the Superior ¡Courts, or those of the Inferior Courts, or upon any body else. Impliedly, if it is conferred upon those Judges, it is more plainly conferred upon the Justices of the Peace. They, the Judges, ••are not mentioned at all in the Statute—Justices of the Peace •are. Not only are Justices of the Peace mentioned in the Act— they are, in the first part of the section aforesaid, expressly .given jurisdiction to issue distress warrants of a particular ¡kind, viz: for thirty dollars and under; and with this part of the Act, the latter part is coupled by the words, “and where any distress shall issue for a sum exceeding thirty dollars, it shall be levied by the Sheriff”, &c. “Issue” from whom? •Nobody but a Justice of the Peace has been mentioned. “ Issue for a sum exceeding thirty dollars, it shall be” issued, not by a Justice of the Peace, but by a Judge of the Superior ;Courts ? No. Nothing about by whom it is to be issued, but • all about by whom, merely, it is to be levied. The large warrant is to be- levied by the Sheriff—the small by the Constable; and this is the main difference between the first part of the •Section and the last part.

-It is certain, however, that if a Justice of the Peace has no *117power to issue a warrant for such a sum as that in this caso, viz: one exceeding thirty dollars, nobody has. But somebody has the power—“ and where any distress shall issue for a sum exceeding thirty dollars”. Therefore, a Justice of the Peace has the power.

This view is confirmed by matter which is contained in thé Act, “ to amend the Rent Laws of this State”, so as to give landlords remedies against tenants holding over. By that Act power is given to Judges of the Superior and Inferior ■'Courts, and to Justices of the Peace, to issue warrants for dispossessing tenants who hold over. This power is at least as great and as important as the power to issue distress warrants for sums exceeding thirty dollars. The Statutes are in pari materia.

The view is also confirmed by what is to be found in other Statutes—those which respectively concern bail, attachments, and many summary proceedings. These Statutes, respectively, permit Justices of the Peace, in all of these cases, to initiate the proceedings; why, then, should not Justices of the Peace be allowed to initiate the proceedings in the similar, a.nd certainly not more important matter, of collecting rents, generally ?

Indeed, in criminal cases, Justices of the Peace have power, for a time, to imprison 'the person. It is not .against analogy, therefore, that they should have the power questioned in this ease.

£2.] The Court below erred, therefore, in holding that the Justice of the Peace had not the power to issue the warrant.