M'kee Co. v. Joseph Love, Sheriff

The record shows that this was an action commenced by sci. fa. against the sheriff, viewing him as bail for Isaac Brownloe, against whom the plaintiffs had issued a capias ad respondendum, directed to the sheriff of Knox county, upon which the defendant indorsed the time when it was received and likewise executed and committed to the common prison of the county, and dated the return on the day the commitment took place, which was anterior to the day on which the Court sat to which the writ was returnable. The plaintiffs proceeded with their cause against Brownloe, and recovered a judgment; took out a capias ad satisfaciendum against him, upon which the sheriff returned non est *Page 244 inventus; after which this sci. fa. was sued out; to it, the sheriff by his counsel appeared in the Grant Court, and moved that the scire facias might be quashed, which motion was overruled; he then filed several pleas: first, nul tiel record, upon which issue was taken; second, a plea which represents the same facts in substance, that are stated in the return on the cap. adres.; to wit, that he executed the writ, and committed the defendant, Brownloe, to prison for want of bail. The third plea varied in form, but not in substance, from the second. To each of these last pleas, the plaintiffs demurred, and, after argument, the Circuit Court overruled the demurrers; from which decision the plaintiffs appealed, and the main question made in this court was, whether the demurrers ought to have been overruled. One or two other questions were made, upon which the Court gave no opinion, as it was unnecessary.

Whatever is said will be as much applicable to the second as to the third plea; therefore both will be considered at the same time. Two questions seem naturally to grow out of the point made by these demurrers. First, whether the sheriff is responsible in any mode? Secondly, whether he is responsible in the mode the plaintiffs have pursued. As to the first, it may be laid down as a general rule that the return of a sheriff ought to show that he has done that which the face of the process commanded him to do, or state such facts as, in law, will form an excuse for not having done so. The cap. adresp. against Brownloe commanded him to take the body of the defendant if to be found in his county, and him safely keep, so that he have his body before the Court, c., to answer the plaintiff in a plea,c. The answer to this command, as disclosed in this return and in the plea, is, that he executed the writ; that is, arrested the defendant, and committed him to prison on a particular day anterior to the return. What became of him afterwards is not said, either in the return or in the pleas. We are bound to suppose that he, by some means, escaped, either with or without the consent of the sheriff, between the time of his commitment and the issuing of the cap. ad satis., because, if still in jail, the sheriff could not have returned nonest inventus upon that process. If still in his prison, he would have been easily found, and the sheriff would no doubt have returned that he was still in confinement. Assuming it, then, as a fact, which we must believe from this record, that Brownloe had actually escaped, and could not be produced to satisfy the judgment recovered, and that no bail had been taken by the *Page 245 sheriff, and that the sheriff has signified no matter whatever to excuse this escape, this question finally presents itself, Is the sheriff responsible? At common law, when the sheriff arrested a man upon a cap. ad resp. he was bound to produce him at the time he returned the writ. The plaintiff could not proceed with his suit without the production of the defendant, and the Court would compel the sheriff to produce him, or it would amerce him; but if he did produce the defendant when he returned his process, what he had done with him, between the service and the return of the writ, was matter of no importance. As the sheriff was thus bound by law to produce the defendant, it was left at his own discretion to take bail for his appearance or not. The consequence of this was, that sheriffs frequently abused this discretionary power of taking bail by confining those who would offer good bail until they extorted considerable sums from defendants to procure that indulgence which the sheriffs ought to have shown without exacting any compensation. To remedy this evil, the parliament in the reign of Henry VI. passed a statute to compel sheriffs to receive bail when that which was good was offered.

The only alteration produced by this statute was in case of defendants; still the sheriff was bound to produce the defendant at the return of the writ; and, if he did not, he was responsible to the same extent, and in the same mode, that he was before passing that statute; and whatever damage he sustained by the non-appearance of the defendant, he could be remunerated for upon the bond which he had taken, which was payable to himself and not to the plaintiff. Afterwards another statute was passed, empowering sheriffs to assign these bonds which they took for the appearance of defendants to the plaintiffs; and after this statute, if the plaintiffs thought the bail for appearance good they could, where the defendants did not appear, sue upon the bond, and, by that means, force an appearance or collect their demand. When a defendant appeared to the action, he did so by giving in court, or to some authorized person out of court, what was called bail above, or bail to the action. When this was done the suit went on; and if the plaintiff recovered a judgment, he could make the bail to the action pay his demand, unless the body of the defendant was surrendered up that the plaintiff might have him in execution if he chose, or the defendant himself made payment. Through all the different changes of the law, the utmost strictness was observed towards sheriffs where they had taken bail to secure the *Page 246 plaintiff, and in every instance where they suffered a defendant to escape, after the time of executing the cap. ad resp., they were made responsible, until they could and did assign some satisfactory excuse for such escape.

The remedy which the plaintiff had against them was an action on the case for an escape on mesne process. If the sheriff voluntarily suffered the defendant to escape, it was unlawful for him to retake him, and he was responsible to the plaintiff. If the escape was involuntary, but by the negligence of the sheriff, be was responsible, unless he pursued and retook the defendant before the plaintiff commenced his action against him. The cases in which sheriffs were excused for escapes were very few; and only in such as he could not by reasonable exertions prevent; for example, where the defendant was turned loose by the common enemy of the country, where he was rescued on his way to jail by a mob, or where the jail in which the defendant was confined was blown down by a tempest, and the defendant thereby escaped; but in every case the sheriff must himself show his excuse, if he has one: it is never to be presumed. If this were an action for an escape on mesne process, and that remedy was in force by our law, and such pleas as these were filed, they would require but little consideration. "He took the defendant, and put him in jail." There he stops. What became of him afterwards? By what means did he get out? What exertions have been used by the sheriff to retake him? These would be important inquiries; and the sheriff would have to disclose them in such way as to excuse himself, or be bound to satisfy the plaintiff. These pleas seem to take it for granted, that when the sheriff executes a cap. ad resp., commits the defendant to prison, that he has no further concern in the matter; that there his duties cease. This is a most important mistake, and cannot be too soon corrected. It is as much his duty to keep him in jail until he is properly discharged, as it was to put him there. The jail is his house, designed to enable him the more effectually to discharge his duty; and if he, by any means, suffers debtors to escape, the creditors have a right to know by what means it happened; and if it did not happen under such circumstances as will furnish a legal excuse, they will make him responsible. Chit. on Plead. 226, 569, 601; 5 Bac. Ab. Gwil. 384, were cited to prove that these pleas were in substance good; that the plaintiff ought to have replied to them; that the Court would presume any additional facts necessary to make the pleas good. *Page 247

These authorities show, that where the main fact necessary to constitute a good defence is `pleaded, if the law requires this fact to be accompanied by certain circumstances, the Court may infer the circumstances; but it is believed there is no book to be found which will prove, that a court, upon a demurrer, can presume the main fact necessary to a good plea to have existed when the fact itself is not stated in the plea. These pleas are no answer whatever to the action. Supposing it one for an escape, what is the gist of the complaint? Why, that the defendant is gone, and the plaintiffs cannot find him to satisfy their demand. What is the answer? That he took him and confined him in jail before the sitting of the Court, and there it ends. The main points are: what became of him? how did he escape? Not a word in the pleas on these points. The pleas ought to answer the merits of complaint, and to disclose such facts as, primâ facie, would exonerate the defendant. These are not believed to be of that description. Although it may be true that the sheriff would, in some mode, be responsible to the plaintiffs, it is yet to be considered whether he is responsible in this mode.

If he is at all answerable, it must either be in the action of escape, or upon sci. fa. No other has been suggested, nor do we know of any other. One mode, then, of seeing whether the proper remedy has been pursued in this case will be to inquire whether, under our laws, an action on the case will lie against a sheriff for an escape on mesne process. If there be a right to recover of the defendant, and only two methods of suing for redress can be proposed, and it can be shown that in one of them the plaintiff must fail, it would fairly be concluded that the other is the proper remedy. Could a recovery, then, be had in the action of escape? This will entirely depend upon the true construction of the different acts of assembly which relate to this subject. Our Act of 1794 is taken from the North Carolina Act of 1777, and is in the same words; therefore, whatever is a correct construction of the one must be of the other likewise. Ired. Rev. 300, Act of 1777, c. 2, § 16, points out the duty of the sheriff, when he executes a cap. ad resp., to the effect following, — that when he serves the writ, he shall take a bail bond, with two sufficient securities, in double the sum for which the person is held in arrest, and shall return such bond with the writ; and in case the sheriff shall fail or neglect to take such bond, or the bail returned be held insufficient, on exception taken to them he shall be held and stand as *Page 248 special bail; and the plaintiff may proceed to judgment according to the rules afterwards prescribed in the act. By § 17 the sheriff is directed to assign the bail bond to the plaintiff, and if he fail to do so, he shall be held and taken as special bail. Sect. 18 enacts, that when any sheriff shall return that he hath taken the body of any defendant, and committed him to the prison of his county, the plaintiff may enter the defendant's appearance, and he shall be at liberty to plead, and the plaintiff may proceed to judgment as in other cases; provided that the defendant shall not be discharged out of custody, butby putting in bail or rule of court.

Sect. 19 enacts, that all bail taken according to the act shall be special bail, and as such liable to the recovery of the plaintiff; but the plaintiff, after final judgment, shall not take out execution against the bail, until a ca. sa. be returned that the defendant is not to be found in his proper county, and until a sci. fa. hath been returned made known to the bail.

Sect. 20 enacts, that the bail shall have liberty, before final judgment recovered against him, to surrender to the Court, or to the sheriff, during either the sitting or the recess of the Court, the principal in discharge of himself; and such bail shall have power to arrest the principal and secure him until he can make the surrender; and the sheriff is required to receive the surrender, and hold the body of the defendant in custody, as if bail had never been given. The first section of the act passed at the second session of the Assembly, 1809, c. 6, enacts, that, where the principal is surrendered, the sheriff shall take bail in the same manner he is authorized to do when he executes a cap. ad resp. in the first instance. Since the making of these different provisions by statutes, could the plaintiff maintain an action against the sheriff for an escape? We think ourselves safe in stating that such action could, in every instance, be defeated by the plea of a sheriff, unless in the single case where he had concluded himself, by returning an escape, which return had become a matter of record; and very probably in that case likewise; but in this case no such return is made.

If, upon executing a writ, the sheriff takes no bail bond, and suffers the defendant to go at large, the action will not lie, nor can the sheriff be made answerable by attachment, or any rule taken upon him. His situation is the same if he takes insufficient bail, or if the bail bond is not assigned. The act is clear in those three cases, that he shall only be proceeded against as bail. In the case before the Court, he *Page 249 committed the defendant for want of bail, which, it is said, is evidence that the sheriff was not himself bail; that no such connection as that of principal and bail exists, between the defendant and sheriff. This return may be evidence, that, on the day it was written, the sheriff was not bail; but it is no evidence as to any thing which might have taken place afterwards. The sheriff might, at any subsequent period, have voluntarily discharged the defendant, and thereby become bail. Under the eighteenth section of the Act of 1777, it provided the defendant shall not be discharged, except upon giving bail or by rule of court. Suppose an action for the escape to have been commenced, and to that action the sheriff had pleaded that, on some day subsequent to the time specified in the return, he had voluntarily discharged the defendant from confinement, and thereby become bail himself, would not such bail have been good? We are very clear it would, because the law authorized his discharge upon giving bail, and as the sheriff is always, by this law, viewed as good bail, he could at any time have elected to consider himself so, and insist that he should not be proceeded against in an action which would deprive him of many advantages that he would be entitled to, if proceeded against as bail. Suppose an escape to have happened by negligence, and the sheriff to be sued in an action for it, could he not plead that the escape was consented to by him? "Suppose him to plead that, after the escape, he had consented to let the prisoner go at large, would he not thereby defeat the action? It is believed he would, because at any time pending the action, it would be lawful for the sheriff, upon receiving good bail, to discharge the defendant from confinement; and if it was lawful thus to discharge, why should it be unlawful for him to become bail for the defendant himself? The laws do not prohibit this, and the plaintiff is not injured by it. Why, then, harass the sheriff with an action, from a recovery in which he could not be shielded, unless he retook the defendant before its commencement? Whereas if he was to be considered as bail, the plaintiff could not proceed against him until the justice of his demand against his original debtor was ascertained by a judgment, and ca. sa. issued upon that judgment. Suppose bail to have once been taken, and the defendant surrendered by them, pending the action. The defendant is in the same situation as if he had been imprisoned for want of bail; and suppose him to escape, the sheriff could consider himself bail, and defeat an action against himself for the escape. Why? Because, *Page 250 having the power to have taken others as bail if offered, he had the right to be bail himself if he chose, and the plaintiff does not sustain any injury thereby. Vide 1 Hayw. 224.

Even, in the case where the sheriff returns, on the process, that it was executed, and the defendant escaped, it is conceived very doubtful whether the sheriff could be charged in the action of escape. Suppose the sheriff to return the manner in which the escape was effected, and it should appear that the escape was voluntary, it is clear to us the action could not be maintained; because the sheriff, having consented to the release of the defendant, should stand precisely in the same situation as if he had served the writ, and never pretended to restrain the defendant. Suppose by the return it appeared the escape was by the sheriff's negligence, would he be placed in a worse situation for negligence than for connivance at or express consent to the escape? It would seem he ought not. By the law of England, a voluntary escape is the most unfavorable for ________, sheriff, because there he cannot lawfully retake the defendant; whereas in case of a negligent escape, he could be exonerated by retaking the defendant before action against himself.

Shall we, then, reverse the doctrine on this subject, and say that although the sheriff, in case of a voluntary escape, shall not be liable to the action, yet we will, because he has been negligent, prevent him from ever afterwards consenting to the escape? This, it is conceived, ought not to be done. All that the return of an escape could possibly, as it appears to us, prove to the prejudice of the sheriff would be that, at the time of making such return, he did not consider himself as bail; but as it would be lawful for him to retake the defendant, and after such recaption take bail if offered, or become bail himself by a voluntary discharge, it would seem equally correct to let him consider himself as bail, without the formality of a recapture, from which no benefit could result to any one. Suppose the escape to have been produced by such circumstances as would excuse the sheriff from the imputation of its being either voluntary or negligent, there would, in that case, be no doubt he could defeat the action for escape; we are, therefore, unable to think of a case in which an action on the case for an escape, on mesne process, could be maintained against a sheriff, if he was judiciously defended, which we must presume would be done in every case. We are aware of the case in 1 Hayw. 485, in which *Page 251 the action for escape was maintained. The plaintiff, by bringing the action, elected to consider it an escape. The sheriff had returned an escape. What plea he pleaded to the action, or what were the precise circumstances of the case, we are unable to discover; but incline to suppose the proper plea was not pleaded, otherwise the action would not have been maintained. (sic), the case would seem to countenance the idea that, as both parties had elected to consider it an escape, and as the Court were satisfied the defendant was in some shape liable, they did not think it necessary critically to examine whether the action was the proper remedy; but as both parties originally, and in making up the pleadings, considered it the proper remedy, it would consider it so likewise, and gave judgment. This case, therefore, does not seem to us sufficient to remove the impressions made by examining the acts, and by the case before mentioned, 1 Hayw. 225, which, as we believe, goes the whole length of establishing a principle from which it will clearly follow that the sheriff cannot be reached in such an action as that of which we have been speaking.

It may now be proper to say something on the direct question before the Court, and that is as to the sheriff's liability on the scirefacias considering him as bail. It may not be amiss to remark that, from our statutes, it is clear the legislature intended that the bail taken shall answer every purpose of sheriff's or appearance bail, and bail above or bail to the action; and why they are called special bail, it is not material to inquire. It seems clear that in three cases pointed out in the Act of 1777, and in our Act of 1794, the sheriff shall be proceeded against as bail. First, when no bail is taken by him when he returns the writ executed. Second, where insufficient bail has been taken, and the plaintiff has excepted, and given notice in due time.

Third, where a bail bond has been taken and is not assigned. It may be well enough to remark, that it was decided in the Supreme Court at Jonesborough, in the case of Scott, sheriff of Sullivan, that, to make the sheriff liable as bail, in a case where he had taken no bail bond, it was not necessary that the plaintiff should file any exceptions. This is mentioned because that section of our act is obscurely worded, and because this court approve of that decision. An attentive examination of the whole provisions of our laws induces this court to believe that it was the true meaning of the legislature that, in every case where a sheriff is liable at all *Page 252 for an escape on mesne process, he shall only be liable as bail and proceeded against by scire facias, because in the only cases put by the legislature themselves, they confine the remedy to scirefacias, and because, if an action in the old form is resorted to, it can always be defeated by a proper plea of a defendant, as already stated; and it certainly never was intended that that action should be first commenced and defeated by a plea of the defendant that he was himself bail to enable the plaintiff afterwards, upon scirefacias, to use that plea as evidence against the sheriff; because, when in the nineteenth section it is said that after a defendant is committed he shall not be discharged without giving bail or by rule, the inference is irresistible that, if the sheriff does suffer him to escape without being able to show any bail bond, or rule of court, he himself is the bail; and because, upon this construction, we carry into full effect the true design of the legislature, which was, to a considerable extent, to ease sheriffs and defendants likewise. It will also make the mode of proceeding simple and uniform in all cases.

Under the laws as they formerly stood, the defendant was bound to be produced in court at the return of the writ; not so now unless the sheriff chooses. If an escape happened with the sheriff's consent, he could not exonerate himself by retaking the defendant; not so under the statute. If a negligent escape happened, the sheriff was responsible, unless he retook the defendant before the writ returned against himself; not so now. In case of an escape, either voluntary or negligent, the sheriff could be immediately sued without waiting for a judgment against the defendant; sinee this statute he can never be sued by scire facias until judgment recovered against the defendant, and a ca. sa. founded thereon returned "not found;" and finally, if the defendant dies or is surrendered any time before the plea to the scire facias by the sheriff, he is exonerated. These indulgences are highly reasonable in such a country as this, where, in many cases, the jails in the different counties are insecure, and it really seems strange, when the laws on this subject are examined, that any sheriff should wish the old doctrine of escape enforced, which would in many instances produce most serious consequences to the different sheriffs themselves. An honest sheriff, who faithfully endeavors to secure those committed to his custody, and who, when they escape, uses reasonable diligence to retake them, will hardly ever be subjected to the payment of judgments under the latitude allowed by our construction of the law; and surely it is strict justice and sound *Page 253 policy to enforce payment against all those who, by their own consent or connivance or by negligence, suffer defendants to escape, and give themselves no trouble to retake them. That the sheriffs should be faithful to their duties, and diligently discharge them, is the life and soul of the law. Without this, the expense and trouble of trials are useless.

Establish the doctrine once, that, when a sheriff commits a defendant to jail, there his duties cease; that if he escape the plaintiff may search him out as well as he can, and you are done with enforcing payments by a restraint of the defendant's person. This is a pretence to which none of our laws give any countenance. Every indulgence given by law these officers ought to insist on, and are most certainly entitled to; but none others. In this case it has been urged by defendant's counsel that, by proceeding against him as bail, he would be deprived of many defences which would avail him in an action in the ancient form. If we thought so, we should certainly hesitate much before any such decision was made; but we think differently. The moment it is found to be the meaning of the law, that the sheriff can only be made liable on scire facias, it must also be decided that he shall to that process have every defence which in law ought to exonerate him. Give him every plea that would exonerate bail, so far as any of them will apply to his case, and likewise every other plea adapted to his peculiar situation. If inevitable accident has put the defendant out of his power, exonerate him. If his jail by tempest has been overturned, and his prisoner escaped the wreck and cannot be retaken, let him plead it. If the common enemy have overrun the country, liberated the defendant, and he cannot be regained, let him plead it. In short, give him the benefit of every defence to this process which, upon legal principles, will show he ought not to be liable.

Again, it has been urged that, if sued in an action, he could prove that nothing was due from the original defendant. It is true that on the scire facias he cannot do this, and for the best of all reasons, because the scire facias never can issue until after the debt is ascertained by a judgment. The necessity of this defence is superseded in a way very advantageous to the sheriffs. In an action, he can be sued before judgment, and, although he may contest the right of the plaintiff to recover any thing of the defendant, yet it is seldom this right would be of much benefit, because he could not *Page 254 well know how to find the testimony, and if he did ultimately succeed upon that point, it would be at some expense and trouble; whereas by adopting the scire facias all this expense and trouble is saved; because if the plaintiff fails in his action, he can never sue out the scire facias. Again, it has been very much urged, that, if the sheriff is proceeded against as bail, an old sheriff would be bound for every debtor in jail when his time expired, and the new sheriff having the power over them by the transfer, and not being responsible himself, might discharge the whole of them, and thereby ruin the old sheriff. The answer to this argument seems to us so plain that we are surprised the argument itself should be pressed. The law, as already noticed, empowers bail at any time pending the suit to surrender to the sheriff, or to the Court; and such surrender exonerates them. Now upon a change of sheriffs, let the old surrender, have the debtors put into the custody of the new, and if the debtors afterwards escape, and a scire facias be issued against the old sheriff as bail, surely pleading the fact would exonerate him; and the plaintiff must look to the new sheriff for his debtor. It will be readily seen that every thing said in this case as to escapes relates only to escapes upon mesne process. Those upon final process rest upon principles in some respects different, and have no connection with the case before the Court.

Upon the whole, it seems to us that the two pleas to which the plaintiffs have demurred are defective in substance, and that neither of them furnishes any legal defence to this scire facias; we are, therefore, of opinion the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed; and, it having been made to appear to us, that there is such a record as that stated in the scire facias, the plaintiffs ought to have execution against the sheriff.