Court Opinion

ID: 8504550
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:25:49.810343+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:49.711488
License: Public Domain

Gilchrist, J.
The 16th section of the act of January 3d, 1829, N. H. Laws 414, (Ed. of 1830,) provides, that “ parents, &c., shall be liable for all fines and penalties incurred by persons under their care : and may, at the choice of the person prosecuting therefor, be proceeded against in the manner provided by this act, against other delinquents.”
In the 17th section it is provided, that if any non-commissioned officer or private shall be guilty of any offence, &c., it shall be the duty of the clerk of “ the company to which such offender belongs,” to make a complaint in the manner provided by the act.
It is argued for the plaintiff, that the words, such offender, relate to the private alone, and not to the parent. This is true of the particular clause in which the words appear. But the parent, although not an offender himself, is made liable for the neglect of another person, who is an offender. The object of the 16th section is, not to punish the parent for neglect of military duty in his own person, but to furnish *546some security for the payment of the fine, beyond that which is afforded by the arrest of the minor, who, in general, is not possessed of property. The construction contended for by the plaintiff would make this section entirely nugatory, for the parent would not be liable at all.
But, although the parent is not spoken of in the act of 1829, as an offender', he is, in the 16th section, classed with delinquents. He is to be proceeded against “ in the manner provided by this act against other delinquents.''1 And in some cases he is a delinquent. If his son incur a fine, and the parent neglect to pay it, upon proper proceedings had, he will be delinquent until the fine be discharged. He is a delinquent in the sense applicable to all persons, who, being liable for the default of another, neglect to discharge that liability.
The act of July 6th, 1833, repealed all the sections of the act of 1829 which prescribed the mode of collecting the fines. That mode was by complaint and warrant, like those adopted in criminal proceedings, upon which the party was brought before a magistrate, and a trial was had, as in other cases of complaints. The party had due notice of the complaint, and had an opportunity to make his defence. But the act of 1833 provided a much more expeditious remedy. Upon a record having been made of the fine, by the clerk of the company to which the delinquent belonged, it is to be levied by distress and sale of his goods, by warrant under the hand and seal of the captain of the company. Where the supposed delinquent is not liable, his only remedy is by an action of trespass.
The words of the fourth section of this act, which relates to the mode of collecting the fine, would, if considered by themselves, seem to refer solely to the private himself. “ The company to which the delinquent belongs”, is mentioned. The fine is to be levied “ by distress and the sale of the delinquent's goods and chattels,” by warrant under the hand and seal of the captain of “ the company to which such de-*547linqucnt belongs.” But the 16th section of the act of 1829 remains unrepealed. The 10th section of the act of 1833 repeals only “ the 1st, 2d, 3d, 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st sections” of the act of 1829, “and all other acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act.” Now, although the subject was not considered with that careful attention which all legislation demands, so that there is an obscurity in the intention of the legislature, which has been the cause of the present litigation, still we do not perceive any thing in the 16th section of the act of 1829 inconsistent with the act of 1833. The object of the latter act was merely to alter the mode of collecting fines, and not to relieve the parent from his liability for the default of his son. That liability is to be enforced in a different manner, but it still exists. It is not a reason why the parent should be excused from liability, because of an alteration in the mode of proceeding, from a complaint and warrant to a more summary mode. There is as much reason for continuing this liability, whether one or the other mode be adopted. The present more summary mode does not furnish any greater security for the ultimate collection of the fine, than was had where its payment was to be enforced by a complaint and warrant. That there is no inconsistency between the 16th section, and the act of 1833, will clearly appear, if that section be read as a part of the act of 1833; and if it be thus read, it will be seen that all its provisions apply as well to the act of 1833 as to the act of 1829. By the 16th section, the parent is to be proceeded against “ in the manner provided by this act.” This may as well, mean the latter, as the former acts. And if the legislature had intended expressly to provide for the continuance of the liability of the parent, they could not have more effectually accomplished their object, than by inserting the 16th section of the act of 1829, as a section in the act of 1833.
It is argued, as conclusive evidence of an inconsistency between the two acts, that the act of 1833 does not require any previous notice to the parent, of his liability. This re-*548suits from the alteration in the mode of proceeding. Under the act of 1829 this was by a complaint and warrant in all cases. Under the present statute, the mode is by a warrant of distress in all cases. The former mode gave the private notice. The present mode does not in any case. The objection, if it exist at all, applies equally to the case of the soldier and to that of the parent. It applies to the whole act, and amounts to a question, whether the alteration in the proceedings be an expedient and proper alteration, with which we have nothing to do. The ease of the parent may be a hard one, but it is no harder than that of the soldier. They were placed upon the same footing by the act of 1829, and they are upon ecpial footing by the act of 1833. Experience had probably convinced the legislature that the militia system could not be kept up, and the performance of military duty enforced, unless a more summary mode of collecting the fines were adopted ; and that mode, when determined upon, was applied to all cases. We think, therefore, that this objection raises only the question of expediency, which does not come within our province, whether the legislature should not have provided for some notice to the parent, of his liability, before the warrant of distress was allowed to issue, and that it does not show any inconsistency between the two acts.
This is the only question raised at the bar in this case. The 4th section of the act of 1833 provides that all fines, &e. “ of which a record shall have been made by the clerk of the company,” shall be levied by distress, <fcc. It is admitted, in the argument of the counsel for the plaintiff, that a record of the fine was made, and no exception is taken, because that fact is not stated in the plea. The judgment of the court is, that the plea is a good answer to the action.

Demurrer overruled.