Citation Numbers: 144 Tenn. 320
Judges: McKinney
Filed Date: 4/15/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/17/2022
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs, Sallie Cherry and Dug Cherry, instituted this suit in the circuit court of Chester county against S. E. Kennedy, constable, for the purpose of re-covering the penalty of $125 provided by section .4524 of Shannon’s Code for failure to mark or indorse on a certain writ of replevin the date same came into his
‘ ‘ Came to hand and executed by summoning defendant to appear before J. G. Haggard, 18 day of Dec. 1919 at 11 o’clock h. m.
“[Signed] S. E. KeNNedy, Con.”
It appears from the agreed statement of' facts that Mr. Kennedy received the writ on December 15, 1919, the date of its issuance, and that by oversight he neglected to mark thereon the day same was received by him. No insistence is made that either of the plaintiffs suffered any injury or damage by virtue of the failure of the defendant to note on the writ the date of its reception.
The section of the Code relied upon is as follows:
“The clerk, justice, or attorney, issuing any process, shall mark thereon the day on which the same is issued; and the sheriff or other officer into whose hands the same shall come to be executed, shall, in like manner, mark thereon the day on which he shall have received it. The penalty for neglect of this requirement shall be a forfeiture of one hundred and twenty-five dollars, to be recovered in any court having cognizance thereof, by any person who shall sue for the same, with costs.”
The circuit judge sustained a demurrer to the declaration and dismissed the suit.
On appeal to the court of civil appeals, Justice Wilson dissenting, that court reversed the circuit court and entered a judgment in favor of the complainants for $125, with interest. ‘
The defendant insists that at the time of the passage of the act in question, to wit, 1794, justices of the peace were without authority to issue writs of replevin, and hence the statute had no application to writs of that nature.
Upon an examination of the original Act of 1794, chapter 1, section 9, we find that the word “justice,” appearing in the Code, was not included, so that the act did not originally include process issued by a justice of the peace; hut the statute was enlarged and the word “justice” added “in the Code of 1858, at which time justices of the peace had authority to issue writs of replevin. Hence the position of the defendant is hot well taken. The real question for decision is whether the statute in question is penal or remedial.. If the former, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover; otherwise, they are not.
In 36 Cyc. 1180, the author says:
“Strictly and properly speaking, penal statutes are those imposing punishment for an offense committed against the State, which, under the English and American Constitutions, the executive of the State has the power to pardon. In common use, however, this sense has been enlarged to include under the term ‘penal statutes’ all statutes which command or prohibit certain acts, and establish penalties for their violation, and even those which, without expressly prohibiting certain acts, impose a penalty upon their commission. Under this broader definition, penal statutes include not only those in which the penalty is recovered by a public prosecution and inures to the State, but also those permitting a recovery of the penalty by a private individual in an ae-*324 tiou of debt or qui tarn. Tlie true test in determining whether a statute is penal is whether the penalty is imposed for the punishment of a wrong to the public, or for the redress of an injury to the individual. If the statute permits a recovery of the penalt ■ by an individual for the purpose of enforcing obedience to 'the mandate of the law by punishing its violation, it is penal in character; but if the recovery of the penalty by an individual is permitted as a remedy for the injury or loss suffered by him, the statute is remedial. It is the substance and effect of the statute, rather than its form, that is to be considered in determining whether it is penal. Thus, laws enacted for the prevention of fraud, for the suppression of a public wrong, or to effect a public good are not, in a strict sense, penal acts, although they may inflict a penalty for their violation.”
Applying the foregoing test to the facts of this case, it is apparent that the statute in question is not penal, because the officer, in failing to mart the date he received the writ, committed no wrong which affected the public, or about which it was in any sense concerned.
The statute provides that the justice “shall mark thereon the day on which the same is issued,” and the officer “shall, in like manner, mark thereon the day on which he shall have received it. ’ ’
In Elliot & Co. v. Jordan, 7 Baxt., 376, the justice failed to mark on the writ the date of issuance, which it was insisted rendered the writ void. This court held otherwise and said:'
“That the justice did not note the fact of issuance on the back of the warrent does not affect the validity of the proceeding. The statute is directory to the officer,*325 but the fact that warrant was issued and the party actually summoned, gives jurisdiction to the court. The notation of the fact is not essential to its validity.”
A case analogous to the one under consideration is that of Parks v. Railroad Co., 13 Lea, 1, 49 Am. Rep., 655, where Parks sought to recover the penalty provided by chapter 15 of the Acts of 1865-66, the second and fourth sections of which are as follows:
. “Sec. 2. Be it further enacted, that it shall be the duty of each conductor or other employee on any railroad in this State, to announce in loud, distinct words, for each passenger car, the stopping place, station, or depot, or town at which each car or passenger train stops, or sháll be detained for any purpose, and also the time such car or passenger train will stop or be detained.”
“Sec. 4. Be it further enacted, that upon the faiiure of any railroad company, during any trip of the passenger cars, to comply strictly with any of the provisions of the two preceding sections of this act, then such railroad company shall forfeit and pay the sum of one hundred dollars, recoverable before any court having jurisdiction thereof, one half to be paid to the persons suing, and the other half to go to common school fund of the State.”
The court held the statute to be remedial and said: “The inclination of the courts is, therefore, to construe such statutes as remedial, that is as intended to redress an actual injury with a view to prevent its recurrence, and not as punitive, that is, as intended to punish whether the injury has accrued or not.”
The court further said: ‘ ‘ The intent of the legislature in the statute before us was to secure certain benefits to
If the act of 1865-66 is remedial, certainly the act under consideration cannot be treated as penal, because in the former the public is much more concerned than it would be in the failure of an officer to enter on a writ the date same was received in a private suit between two individuals.
"We hold that the court of civil appeals was in errór in entering judgment for the plaintiffs. The writ of certi-orari will be granted; the judgment of the court of civil appeals will be reversed, and that of the circuit court will be affirmed with all costs.