Court Opinion

ID: 3868684
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:02:51.600241+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:36.719732
License: Public Domain

The decision of this case involves simply the rule for the computation of time. The plaintiff was served with a notice on the 18th day of October, and was required to pay the board of a prisoner who was imprisoned on an execution in his favor, "within ten days from the time of the service of said notice," or the said prisoner would be discharged. The prisoner was discharged by the defendant, as jailor, on the 28th of October. The plaintiff in this suit went to the jail on the morning of the 28th, for the purpose of paying the board, and there ascertained that the prisoner had been discharged.
There is much apparent conflict among the authorities on the question of the computation of time; and it is not possible to classify the various decisions so that they will harmonize upon any settled principle of adjudication. The better opinion, as gathered from the numerous decisions of Courts upon the subject, seems to us to be, that where a time is referred to us a "terminus a *Page 44 
quo" in computation, the first day is excluded in computation, unless in cases where, in order to vest an interest, to prevent a forfeiture, or to prevent the divesting of a right, it is necessary to include the day. In all cases where a point of time or the doing of an act is referred to merely as a terminus from which to measure time, the day of the date or of the act should be excluded. In this case, if we resort to an accurate measurement of time, the process being served after 12 o'clock, M., on the 18th, and the prisoner being discharged before 9 o'clock, A.M., on the 28th, the plaintiff would not have ten days, within which to pay the board from the time of the service of the process. In such cases there are in law no fractions of days, and the day of the service must therefore be included or excluded in the computation. We think it more conformable to right, and more in accordance with the current of decisions, as well as more in harmony with the general rule which seems to have been adopted in the practice of our own Courts, that the day of the date should be excluded. Under this rule, the plaintiff would have the amount of time which the statute impliedly promises him, within which to pay the board: under the other rule (the rule including the first day), he would not.
Judgment for the plaintiff. *Page 45