Wilson v. Gillis

After a continuance, the opinion of the Court was drawn up by

WestoN C. J.

'The principal defendant was arrested on mesne process, in virtue of the twelfth section of the stat. of 1831, c. 520, in relation to imprisonment for debt. That section does not prescribe the mode, in which the order of the Justices shall be verified, *57where the order is, that the party under arrest shall be imprisbned, and he gives bond to procure his liberation. The original order, under their hands, is adduced in evidence 1 and we perceive no reason why it should not be regarded as sufficient, there being no express provision, requiring any special mode of proof.

It has been contended, that the return of the officer, as to the order of the Justices, and the bond thereupon taken., ought not to have been received in evidence. That his duty under his precept was discharged, when he carried the party arrested before the Justices, and that his return of further proceedings was unofficial and unauthorized. We think otherwise. It was the duty of the officer, to detain him under arrest, until his discharge therefrom was ordered by the Justices. They were not charged with the security of his person. This devolves upon the officer, who is to hold hint under arrest, until he is otherwise disposed of by order of law. If his imprisonment is ordered, the Justices are required to issue their mittimus for this purpose, if he does not give the bond, which the statute authorizes. If he does give bond, the statute does not prescribe who shall receive it. We think however, that it may be lawfully and properly taken by the officer, running to the creditor, and received for his use. Indeed the officer could not be justified in continuing the arrest, after the tender of an adequate and sufficient bond. We hold it then to be his duty, to return upon his precept, not only that ho had made the arrest required, but what had become of his prisoner. That he had carried him before two Justices of the Peace and of the quorum, and had discharged him upon their order, or had upon their order imprisoned him, having a mittimus for that purpose, or bad liberated him, upon his giving the bond required by law, as the case might be.

The penalty of the bond having become forfeited, by breach of the conditions, the plaintiff is entitled to execution, for so much as in equity and good conscience, he ought to have. His counsel insists, that it should be for the amount of the execution and interest, as was allowed on jail bonds for the liberty of the yard, and as is awarded against bail. Formerly jail bonds were not subject to be chancered, and when that was permitted, execution was to issue in no case for an amouut less than the original debt, cost and interest. And wffien bail are charged, they are to satisfy the judgment against *58their principal out of their own estate, by an express provision of the statute, regulating bail in civil actions. The amount, for which execution shall issue, upon the forfeiture of such a bond as is now before us, is not limited or regulated by statute, so that the damage actually sustained is the proper equitable measure of the plaintiff’s claim. This the jury have settled, and he must have judgment accordingly.

When the Justices refused to discharge the principal defendant, and ordered his imprisonment, the officer was justified in affording him a reasonable time to procure a bond for his enlargement, and his detention for this purpose was lawful. He should have prepared and tendered a bond in conformity with the statute. If the bond in suit is liable to exception as a statute bond, it was freely and voluntarily executed on his part, and he derived from it the benefit he sought. And it seems to us that it may be regarded as a bond good at common law. It may be sustained as such, according to the case of Winthrop v. Dockendorff & al. and the cases there cited.