dissenting. — The facts in this case show that the -plaintiff, having been arrested upon execution, gave a poor debtor’s bond in the usual form; and, to save himself and sureties against a forfeiture thereof, surrendered himself into the custody of the defendant, who was the keeper of the jail in Penobscot county, to which he was liable to be committed under said execution. It further appears, that prior to such surrender lie had cited the creditors before two justices of the peace and of the quorum; submitted himself to examination at the time and place appointed therefor; and, under the direction of the magistrates, actually completed and signed his disclosure. So far all the proceedings are in conformity with the provisions of the statute. It being Saturday, and near midnight, and the creditors desiring to offer other evidence and to be heard by their counsel in the matter, the magistrates, without request from either party, adjourned to Monday morning at nine o’clock to meet at the office of the jail in Bangor, within which the plaintiff, having surrendered himself, as before stated, would then, of necessity, be confined. The time within which one of the alternatives contained in the condition of the bond must be performed to prevent forfeiture, expired on Sunday, the day *20next after the plaintiff’s disclosure and surrender. His voluntary surrender was therefore a performance of the bond; but he could not be discharged from the custody of the jailer without taking the oath required by the statute. The magistrates met at the time and place of their adjournment, being other than that which was originally appointed, and, against the protestation of the creditors, proceeded to hear such evidence as they offered, and, after a full hearing of the parties, adjudged that the plaintiff was entitled to take the oath, and thereupon administered the same and gave him a certificate of the fact, though not strictly, yet substantially in the form-required by the R. S., C. 113, § 31. The plaintiff presented this certificate to the defendant, to whom it was directed, and demanded to be released from his imprisonment. This the defendant refused.
Upon the foregoing facts, the question is, was the plaintiff entitled to his discharge ? The fact that he voluntarily surrendered himself to imprisonment did not justify its continuance, after he became entitled to his discharge. If he was so confined, then his further imprisonment was unjust and unlawful, and this action of replevin for his person well lies. The writ, de homine replegiando, is expressly designed for such a case. See R. S., 1857, c. 101, § 1, and Hutchins v. Van Bokelen, 34 Maine, 126. Whether the plaintiff was entitled to his discharge upon the facts stated, depends upon the true construction of the statute for the "relief of poor debtors.” R. S., 1857, c. 113.
The design of this statute, as stated in its own words, is, that a debtor, in an execution running against his body, "maybe arrested and imprisoned thereon for the purpose of obtaining a discovery of his property wherewith to satisfy it.” Section 21. No part of the statute contemplates the punishment of an honest debtor for his failure to pay his debts; nor should it receive a construction, unless its language necessarily requires it, that will produce any such effect. While it should be so construed as rigidly to secure to creditors legal notice of the time and place appointed for the debtor’s examination, and a full and fair disclosure as to his goods and *21estate, ño such construction should be adopted, or regarded as admissible, as will make it needlessly oppressive to the debtor, by subjecting him to any more imprisonment or expense than is necessary to effectuate the general purpose of the statute. If the creditor gets everything which the statute and the imprisonment of the debtor was designed to give, of which the tribunal which the statute provides, when duly organized, is the judge, then his rights under the statute are at an end, and he has no legal ground of complaint. That the creditors, in the execution against the plaintiff, have obtained, in the judgment of the magistrates, a full and fair disclosure of the actual state of the debtor’s affairs and property, is not to be denied. Nor can it be denied that they have had the same notice, the same tribunal, the same examination, and the same oath administered, which the statute contemplates. It is true, the plaintiff was not actually in prison when his citation issued. He had been discharged from his arrest by giving a statute bond, which was substituted for imprisonment until the time limited for the performance of its condition should expire; and no reason is perceived, why a citation issued during this period, especially when it is precisely the same in kind, may not be as effectual as one issued after the debtor had surrendered himself into the custody of the jailer. The right of the plaintiff to a certificate of discharge was in no way dependent upon his bond. He was equally entitled, by a compliance with the provisions of the statute, to an exemption from imprisonment, after the performance of the condition of his bond as before. He might have cited and disclosed immediately upon his arrest, without giving any bond; and, after citing, he might, for the safety of the officer, have gone into prison and remained there until the time appointed for his disclosure should arrive, without affecting the legality of the citation he had given, and, for the same reasons, he may avail himself of a citation issued while under bond, after he has voluntarily surrrendered to imprisonment to save its condition. A construction of the statute which *22would require the debtor to cite anew, at additional expense, and to remain in prison at least fifteen days after his surrender, when he had given the legal notice of his intention to take the poor debtor’s oath fifteen days before, of the time and place appointed for his disclosure, would not only be useless, but barbarous, and, thei'efore, a reproach upon the law. It would make the statute an engine of oppression instead of relief. Such a construction is wholly inadmissible.
But, it is said that the citation, though legal in its character, may be waived by the debtor. This is undoubtedly so. But a waiver is always a question of intention, express or implied, and is usually resorted to, to prevent injustice. Simonds v. Parker, 1 Met., 511. It ought not to be raised by implication, except in clear cases, when its effect is to prevent the end at which it aims. Under the circumstances of his surrender, is it not too much to infer from it, that the defendant intended a waiver of any of his rights, existing by virtue of his previous citation ? Why should an intention to give a new notice be presumed, when a legal one, sufficient for his purpose, already existed, especially when such new notice would imply a voluntary incarceration in prison, which might be avoided under the old one. Such a presumption is not only repelled by the subsequent conduct of the plaintiff, but is against the usual tendencies and motives of human action. This case is widely different from the case of Williams v. McDonald, 18 Maine, 121. There the debtor, after having once cited his creditor, gave a poor debtor’s bond to relieve himself from imprisonment, in which one of the conditions was, to cite the creditor, and take the oath required by the statute. The very language of this condition imposed a new notice, and was, therefore, an express waiver of the notice which had been given, so far as the fulfilment of the bond was concerned. The case simply decides that what -was stipulated in the bond to loe done in the future, could not be regarded as performed, by showinu that the obligor had done the same thins- before the *23bond was made. It lias no tendency to show a waiver under the circumstances of the present case.
But, it is further urged, that the certificate of the justices was insufficient inform to authorize the plaintiff’s discharge. That it was sufficient to carry notice to the defendant, that the plaintiff had taken the .oath required by law to entitle him to his release from imprisonment, cannot well be denied. It was the oath and not the certificate that conferred such right. The certificate is only evidence that the oath had been taken. After the oath has been administered, it is made the duty of the .justices to give a certificate, and such certificate is conclusive evidence of the fact. But it is no where in the statute made the only evidence upon which the jailer can act. Might he not, if personally present when the oath was administered, act upon his own knowledge of the fact and discharge the debtor, without subjecting himself to an action therefor? The certificate, although the best evidence, is not necessarily a condition precedent to the debt- or’s discharge; and, to require that such certificate, after the oath has been duly taken, shall be made in the exact form which the statute prescribes, would often make the statute a trap instead of a relief. It surely is sufficient if it substantially state the facts which entitle the debtor to his discharge.
Again, it is contended that the magistrates had no power to adjourn from the office of Mr. Knowles to that of the jail. There is no express prohibition in the statute to prevent their adjourning to a place other than that appointed in the citation, when necessity requires it, as there is in relation to the time beyond which they shall not adjourn. There being no restriction, no reason is apparent why the magistrates should not have the power usually incident to such tribunals, of consulting their own convenience as well as the wishes or necessities of the parties, by adjourning to any reasonable place. Circumstances beyond the control of the magistrates may exist to render such adjournment absolutely necessary. The jurisdiction of the magistrates was not *24therefore lost by their adjournment, and their certificate of discharge was effectual and entitled the plaintiff to his release from imprisonment. The result is, that the defendant, in my judgment, should be defaulted, but, as the evidence shows no design to oppress or intentional violation of his official duty, the damages should be only nominal.