Citation Numbers: 115 A. 681, 97 Conn. 66
Judges: Wheeler, Beach, Gager, Curtis, Burpee
Filed Date: 12/5/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The trial court sustained the plaintiffs in error Lorch, in their claim that the notice to quit served upon them was not a legal notice, in that it was not a "duplicate copy" but was merely a true and attested copy of the original notice. No other proof of service of the notice to quit was made than the officer's return. In the statute as first enacted (Public Acts of 1806, p. 729) it was provided that a *Page 69 duplicate copy of the notice should be delivered to the lessee, or left at his place of residence, "in the presence of at least one credible witness." In the Revision of 1875, p. 491, the words "by a proper officer or indifferent person" were substituted for "in the presence of at least one credible witness"; so that this portion of the statute has since read: "Duplicate copies of such notice shall be made, one of which shall be delivered to the lessee, or left at his place of residence, by a proper officer or indifferent person," and since this Revision the service of the notice to quit has been by an officer or an indifferent person. Conforming to service in civil actions, the return of the officer or indifferent person made upon the duplicate copy not served upon the lessee, has been accepted as prima facie proof of the fact of service.
The sole question raised upon the appeal is whether a true and attested copy of the original notice is the "duplicate copy" of the notice to quit which the statute requires to be served in order to constitute a legal notice. Under our law this statutory remedy is to be construed strictly. Colt v. Eves,
"Duplicate" as applied to any form of written instrument, has a determined and unvarying meaning. Burrill's definition has been frequently approved and quoted by the courts of this country. "That which is double, or twice made; an original instrument repeated. A document which is the same as another, in all essential particulars. . . . Sometimes defined to be thecopy of a thing, but, though generally a copy, a duplicate differs from a mere copy, in having all the validity of an original." 1 Burrill's Law Dictionary (Ed. 1859) p. 526. Bouvier's Law Dictionary (Vol. 1, Rawle's 3d Rev.) p. 958, defines it as: "The double of anything. A document which is essentially the same as some other *Page 70
instrument. . . . A duplicate writing has but one effect. Each duplicate is complete evidence of the intention of the parties." The War Revenue Act of 1898, required a stamp to be affixed to each bill of lading and to each duplicate thereof, and the Circuit Court of Appeals thus construed the word duplicate in this Act: "We cannot help thinking that in the business world there is a plain distinction recognized between a duplicate and a copy, and that the former is understood to be one of two instruments, each of which is original, and intended to have the force of an obligation irrespective of the other, and that a copy is understood to be a transcript of an original; having the form, but not the essence, of an obligation." Wright v.Michigan Cent. R. Co., 65 C.C.A. 327, 330, 130 F. 843, 846. The court cites as its authority, Burrill's definition and that in 10 Amer. Eng. Ency. of Law (2d Ed.) 318, where "duplicate" is defined as "a document which is the same in all respects as some other instrument, from which it is indistinguishable in its essence and operation." The laws of a fraternal order provided that when a beneficial certificate is lost or destroyed, the member insured is entitled to a duplicate certificate. In determining that the new certificate issued was not a duplicate certificate, the court said: "A duplicate has been judicially defined to be an original instrument reproduced, not a new agreement, but merely written evidence of the lost instrument to take its place. It must be the same in all other respects as some other instrument from which it is indistinguishable." A. O. U. W. v. McFadden,
Our research has failed to find an authority which defines "duplicate," or construes its use in a statute, as varying from that given by these authorities. It has sufficiently appeared that a copy can never be a duplicate copy. Nor can a "true copy" or a "certified copy" be a duplicate copy.
The Act relating to the deportation of Chinese laborers authorized the procurement of a duplicate certificate *Page 72
of residence. The court held that "duplicate" was not synonymous with "true copy." Dillard v. UnitedStates, 72 C.C.A. 451, 456, 141 F. 303, 308. The statute of Indiana required a duplicate of a certificate of incorporation to be filed; the court held that the statute was not complied with by filing a certified copy; that the term certified copy is not synonymous with duplicate. A "duplicate," it held, "must be executed by the same parties . . . with the same formalities . . . as an original." Nelson v. Blakey,
These authorities conclusively determine that when our statute says "duplicate copies of such notice," it means two copies, the original notice and a copy which repeated the original notice and had the validity of the original. They likewise determine that no mere copy and no true or certified copy can be a duplicate copy. All that the return means when it says "a true copy," is that it is a true copy of the original, but whether made by the hand that made the original or made by someone else and presumably the sheriff, we have no means of knowing. It is not the original repeated, and cannot be held to be a duplicate copy. The certificate of the sheriff that the copy was "attested," does not help to make the copy a duplicate copy. All that it signifies is that the sheriff bears witness or affirms that it is a true copy. To "attest" means "to bear witness to; . . . to affirm to be true or genuine." McGuire v.Church,
The history of this statute and the practice under it from its beginning are a complete demonstration of the correctness of our construction of its term "duplicate copies." The statute was enacted in 1806, and is found on page 729 of the Public Acts of 1806. The part under consideration is in this form: "which notice shall be in writing, in the following form, viz.: I hereby *Page 73 give you notice that you are to quit possession of the land, house (apartment, store, etc., as the case may be) now occupied by you, on or before the (here insert the day, place, date, and name). Of which notice duplicate copies shall be made, one of which shall be delivered to the lessee, or left at his place of residence, in the presence of at least one credible witness."
The statute remained in this form until, in the Revision of 1866, p. 82, it was provided that the notice should be "in substance in the form following," instead of as in its original form without the qualification "in substance." Shortly after the enactment of the 1806 statute, the practice became established that "duplicate copies" meant two copies, identical in form and each signed by the lessor, one of which should be served on the lessee and the other retained by the lessor and used in his proof that he had given the statutory notice to quit. In the Civil Officer of that day, edited by Niles (1833), we find a form of complaint in summary process, p. 127, one of the allegations of which is "that afterward, viz. on the ________ day of _________, the complaint drew a written notice in the words and figures following, viz.: I hereby give you notice that you are to quit possession of the house (land or apartment as the case may be) now occupied by you, on or before the ____ day of ______ A. D. ______ Dated at H _____ the _____ day of __________ A. B.
"And the complainant saith that he made duplicate copies of said notice, one of which he left on the day of the date thereof, at the said residence of the said C. D. (or delivered to him) in the presence of one credible witness; and the other he hath in possession, ready to be produced in court." The statute required the insertion in the notice of the name of the lessor. But in practice the name of the lessor was inserted at the end of the notice. This was its natural place and, *Page 74 placed there, it complied with the statute. It will be noticed that this was the practice when the statute required literal compliance with the form of notice given, and the signature of the lessor to the notice made it clear that the notice must be that of the lessor and could not be a copy made by another. "Duplicate copies" as construed by this ancient practice meant an original instrument twice made, each having the authenticity of an original.
The revisers, in the Revision of 1875, p. 491, made two changes in this part of the statute. They omitted from the body of the statute the insertion of the name, and placed it at the end of the notice. The statute, with the practice thereunder for sixty-nine years, was perfectly clear. What the revisers did was to make it in its terms conform to this practical construction by placing the name at the end of the notice as had been the continuing practice. It was not the purpose of the revisers to change the meaning of "duplicate copies," that had been fixed long since. The other change in providing for service of the notice by the officer or indifferent person, we have referred to. It does not affect the question we are considering.
In 1881 Professor Townsend edited the 15th Edition of the Civil Officer. He was an associate in the practice of the law of Ex-Chief Justice Simeon E. Baldwin, one of the active members of the committee which made the Revision of 1875. His opportunities of knowing the intention of the revisers was unequaled. On page 195, he gives the form of complaint in summary process, generally following the form found in earlier editions of the Civil Officer, except as to the giving of the notice, the allegation for this being, paragraph 3: "On ________, 188_, he gave due notice to the lessee, in the manner prescribed by the statute, to quit possession of the premises on or before _______, 188_." This change *Page 75 was undoubtedly made to make the form conform to the requirement of the Practice Act and the Rules thereunder, and preceding the form he states: "Duplicate copies of this notice must be made, both of them to be signed by the party personally or by his attorney, and one served upon the tenant, by a proper officer or indifferent person. A certificate of service should be endorsed upon the other by the party making the service, with an affidavit of the truth of the return, when made by an indifferent person." This statement reiterated the established practice. It did nothing more. Three revisions of the statutes have been made since 1875. This statute has remained unchanged.
The practice as stated by Professor Townsend has also remained the approved practice and been reiterated in two later editions of the Civil Officer. The published blanks have required the signature of the lessor to the notice to quit, and the opinion of the profession has never before questioned that "duplicate copies" did not have the meaning which established practice had recognized. This practical construction placed upon "duplicate copies" for over one hundred years, is high, almost conclusive, evidence that their meaning conforms and should conform to that adopted by the practice. It shows a "practical construction" put upon the law, which is to be regarded as "high evidence of what the law is." State ex rel. Mathewson v. Dow,
In a matter of such daily practical use as is the remedy provided by this statute, we think it of urgent importance that the long-established practice should remain unbroken, and especially so in a case where the ordinary legal construction placed upon the language under consideration conforms to the adopted practice.
The officer's return attests that the copy he served *Page 76 was a true copy; it does not purport to attest that it was a copy signed by the lessor or owner, and hence it does not purport to attest that it was a duplicate copy. The officer could not serve a true copy, nor could he make a copy from the original, as the agent of the lessor, and serve that. Duplicate copies may be made by the lessor or his legal representative, but the officer or indifferent person cannot be the proper legal representative for the making of these notices.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Maston v. Glen Lumber Co. , 65 Okla. 80 ( 1917 )
State Ex Rel. Mathewson v. Dow , 78 Conn. 53 ( 1905 )
Sullivan v. Lazzari , 135 Conn. App. 831 ( 2012 )
Amato v. Campano , 141 Conn. 247 ( 1954 )
Jo-Mark Sand & Gravel Co. v. Pantanella , 139 Conn. 598 ( 1953 )
Fernandez v. Rivera and Morelos, No. Spbr 9412 28466 (Jan. ... , 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 143 ( 1995 )
Vogel v. Bacus , 133 Conn. 95 ( 1946 )
Kahn v. Watford, No. Cvbr-9601-02973 (Apr. 12, 1996) , 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 2832 ( 1996 )
Schwartzberg v. Arbour , 22 Conn. Super. Ct. 395 ( 1961 )
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Housing Authority v. Bond , 30 Conn. Super. Ct. 580 ( 1973 )
Cianciolo v. Plano , 23 Conn. Super. Ct. 291 ( 1962 )
Johnston v. Wright , 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 860 ( 1935 )
Weiss v. Gutierez, No. Spno 9503-17215 (May 22, 1995) , 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 5062 ( 1995 )
Great Western Power Co. v. City of Oakland , 196 Cal. 131 ( 1925 )
Swift & Upson Lumber Co. v. W. L. Hatch Co. , 115 Conn. 494 ( 1932 )
City Lumber Co. of Bridgeport, Inc. v. Borsuk , 131 Conn. 640 ( 1945 )
Town of Southington v. Francis , 159 Conn. 64 ( 1970 )
Winter v. Casco Bank and Trust Co. , 1979 Me. LEXIS 647 ( 1979 )
Bogue v. Moquin, No. Spbr-9412-28487 (Jan. 25, 1995) , 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 466-B ( 1995 )