Evans v. Frey

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Sergeant, J.

The first error assigned is; in the opinion of the court below that the constable ought to have been joined with the sureties in the action.

The legislature has established a tribunal for the recovery of sums under 100 dollars, the proceedings of which are in many respects different from the ordinary proceedings of courts, and the extent of its jurisdiction must depend on the language and meaning of the act of assembly. Regulations respecting constables form a material part of the provisions of these-acts;' especially those that are designed to enforce their faithful discharge of dirty in the prompt payment of moneys coming into their hands on executions. For this purpose summary rédress is given by the twelfth section of the act of the 20th of March 1810. In' the nineteenth section the m'ode of proceeding against the-constable’s bail is specified, and in certain cases the justice is directed “ to issue a scire facias and proceed against the bail for the recovery of judgments had before him against the constable,” in the manner that constables are suable, saving the right of appeal. The enumerated cases are, where judgment'is rendered against a constable for neglect or refusal to perform his duty, and he becomes insolvent, abandons-his country, or for any other reasons it becomes impracticable for such judgment to be recovered from him; or where after default he abandons his country before judgment had. Now if we refer to the words of the act, the proceeding by scire facials is directed to be against the bail. If we consult its spirit, what reason is there why the constable should be joined in the scire facias? After the plaintiff has pursued him to insolvency or abandonment of his country, or arrived at a state of utter impracticability to collect the debt, a further pursuit would be unavailing to the plaintiff, and of no benefit to the bail. The necessity of uniting all the obligors in a suit on a joint and several bond, where more than one are sued, is founded on a rule of law which has in view the primary liability of the principal, and after that the equal distribution of a common burthen. But where it is already plain by judicial proceeding, that the constable is inaccessible or insolvent, the joinder of him would be a fruitless céremony. ' Indeed in one case put by the act,- that of abandonment of his country, the scire facias could not be served on the constable. No injustice is done to the bail by the omission. The constable must have abandoned his country, and so no proceeding against him can be had, or every means of-collecting the money from him has been already exhausted, and it is not until the las't and desperate stale of his affairs, that the bail is to be called upon.

I am therefore of opinion that it is not necessary that the constable should'be joined in the scire facias.

The second error assigned is in the opinion of the court below *211that the proceeding against the sureties of the constable before the justice was unauthorized by law.

In the case of Palmer v. The Commonwealth, 6 Serg. & Rawle 245, and Campbell v. The Commonwealth, 8 Serg. & Rawle 414, it was contended that the sureties in a bond given by a constable for the execution of his office were suable before a justice of the peace, and not in the common pleas; but this court decided that this jurisdiction was concurrent. Títere is no reason why a general jurisdiction should not be conferred on the courts, at the same time that in particular cases a portion of that jurisdiction is also entrusted to a magistrate. The act of the 20th of March 1810 vested both jurisdictions, and must have intended both should take effect. If the sum demanded exceeded 100 dollars, it was beyond the ordinary jurisdiction of the magistrate, and was peculiarly proper for- the court. If under 100 dollars it was the reverse.

In the present case the suit was brought before a justice, and it is now contended that he had not that jurisdiction. The argument is grounded on the provisions of the third section of the act passed the 29th of March 1824, Purd. Dig. 510, which was subsequent to the decisions above referred to. This section re-enacts the twenty-ninth section of the 100 dollar act, concerning constables’ bonds, with alterations in the amount of the penalty and the number of sureties, and some change of language in other respects not affecting the substance. Then comes this provision, which is not in the act of the 20th of March 1810, and in which the question arises: “and such obligations may be proceeded in as other official bonds are by law directed.” It is contended by the defendants that the effect of this provision is that all proceedings on constables’ bonds must be in court, because there, only, proceedings on official bonds of a similar nature are to be had by virtue of the fifteenth section of the act of the 27th of March 1713, Purd. Dig. 670. This provision,however,isnot peremptory, but permissive. The party grieved is at liberty to proceed in court, but lie is not obliged to do so. A clause of this kind cannot be fairly construed as a repeal of the nineteenth section of the 100 dollar act. On the contrary it would seem to have bean inserted to remove the doubts that had recently arisen, whether the courts bad concurrent jurisdiction, and also to restore, in suits on constables’ bonds in court, the ordinary mode of proceeding on' official bonds by obtaining a cautionary judgment, instead of separate actions to obtain separate damages, which had been held, by analogy to suits on sheriff’s bonds, to be the proper mode of proceeding. One consequence of this, and a hard one, was, that in suits in the common pleas, where the demand was under 100 dollars, the plaintiff lost his costs: whereas now one judgment only is obtained; and the vexation of multiplying actions against the sureties, and of the costs attending them, is avoided. By the act of 1824, the proceeding in court on constables’ bonds is simplified and facilitated, leaving in full force the nineteenth section of the act of 1810, which places in the hands of the magistrate the *212salutary power of proceeding in the cases enumerated by scire facias against the sureties of á delinquent constable, where judgment has been previously obtained before such justice against the constable.

Judgment reversed, and judgment for plaintiff.