Filed Date: 9/15/1832
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The argument, that the legislature meant to give permanency to what had been already done by the courts, though deemed to have been a misconstruction in the first instance, is plausible, but unsound. By the words “ then existing laws,” was doubtless meant, not only the text of the preceding acts, but the qualification it had received in practice. But though the legislature did not mean to interfere with any established practice as regarded the past-, they evidently did not mean to give it the fixed form of positive enactment. To have done so, would have been deliberately to render the consequences of what they deemed error, irretrievable: an intent not to be imputed to them. They intended to leave the construction as to by-gone transactions exactly where they found it; in the province of the courts. But even supposing the words were
Decree of the circuit court and common pleas affirmed.