1. It appears from the record that an affidavit was made before a justice of the peace of Jefferson, that Clayton had exhibited a circus for pay, without first obtaining a license from the clerk of the County Court; thereupon a warrant was issued for his arrest, &c. Then follows a recognizance in usual form, save only that the name of the surety is not inserted in its body, and it is not attested by the justice, but is preceded with the following statement: “ And on the thirtieth day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty, the said John Clayton, together with Jonathan B. Badger his security, entered into a recognizance before the said Simpson Robinson, esquire, a justice of the peace for the county and state aforesaid, in the words and figures following, to-wit.”
We do not regard the case of Lloyd and others v. The State, as an authority adverse to the sufficiency of-the recognizance. The objection there was, that the bond of the plaintiffs in error, was not authenticated, so as to inform the court, that it was taken as a recognizance, before any officer authorized by the law for that purpose.
In Howie & Morrison v. The State, [1 Ala. Rep. N. S. 113,] it was held that a recognizance was properly certified, which commenced thus — “ Be it remembered, that on, &c„ came, &c., before me, &c., a justice of the peace in and for the county, &c., who acknowledged themselves, &c.,” and at the foot was approved by the justice.
The certificate of the justice affirms, that the recognizance in the present case had been entered into by the principal and surety, before him. This we regal’d a substantial compliance with what was adjudged necessary and sufficient in the cases cited. The object of the recognizance must have been to effect what its terms indicate, and being signed and sealed both by the principal and surety, cannot be held to be invalid as to the latter, because his name was not inserted in the blank left for that purpose in its body. It sufficiently appears from the manner of the execution, and the statement of the justice who are the recognizors; and a formal attestation at the foot would not have imparted any additional validity, or authenticity to the recognizance.
The condition of the recognizance required that Clayton should appear at, &c. “ to answer a charge of the State of Alabama, exhibited against him for exhibiting a circus for pay, without first *24obtaining a licence from the clerk of the county court, &c.” The judgment nisi recites, that Clayton « being solemnly called to come into Court, as he was this day bound to do by his recognizance, to answer a charge of the State of Alabama exhibited against him for exhibiting a circus without first obtaining a licence according to law, came not, but made defaultthat Badger being called to bring into Court the body of his principal, as he was bound to do by his recognizance, failed, áse. Then follows a judgment against both of the recognizors, for the sum of four hundred dollars, the penalty of the recognizance.
This proceeding was instituted under the third section of the act of 1837, “ The better to regulate the taxing of pedlars and shows.” That section requires, that every person who shall exhibit any circus, áse., for hire or emolument, shall first obtain from the clerk of the County Court of the county where the exhibition shall take place, a licence authorizing the same: and further, “ every person who shall exhibit as aforesaid, without first obtaining such licence, shall forfeit and pay the sum of two hundred dollars, to be recovered by indictment in the Circuit Court of the proper county, for the use of the proper county, áse.”
The offence denounced by the statute, though not literally, is yet described with sufficient accuracy in the condition of the recognizance ; but the judgment does not show that the principal recognizor was called, or Iris surety required to bring him to answer for any offence known to the law. It does not state the charge to be the exhibition of a circus, for hire, pay, or emolument, but a circus, without first obtaining a licence according to law. Now it may be strictly true, that a circus was exhibited, and no penalty incurred; for to make such an act punishable, it is necessary that the person who did or caused it to be done, should have received Mre, áse.
In Howie & Morrison v. The State—Supra—it was held not to be necessary to recite the entire recognizance in the judgment nisi, but it should be stated, that the accused was required to answer the charge wlfrch Ms recognizors had stipulated he should answer; this is necessary to show a breach of the recognizance, without which it would not be forfeited. If the accused is required to answer a charge variant from that described in the condition of the recognizance, tliis will not show a breach; and a forfeiture in such a caséis not provided for, and a judgment nisi cannot *25be supported. It is essential therefore to ascertain if the record shows, that the accused was required to answer the charge specified in the recognizance.”
Further — «If a suit was instituted on a bond with a like condition, and the breach was alleged in the same manner as in this judgment nisi, the declaration ’Would be bad on demurrer; as much certainty is required in the judgment nisi, as is requisite in showing a breach of a contract in an action of debt; and as this is not shown in the present case, the judgment is erroneous.”
This decision seems to us to be conclusive of the case at bar, and shows the necessity of a substantial conformity of the judgment to the recognizance. And it may be added, that the judgment is not only defective for a mis-recital of the charge against the principal recognizor, but as the scire facias can only be sustained by a valid judgment, it is defective in not stating any legal charge.
In respect to the third and fourth points, made by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error, it may be remarked that they are not well founded. The judgment is rendered for the amount of the recognizance, and nothing more, and that is only double the amount of the forfeiture which the statute imposes for the offence. There is no complaint that the penalty is excessive, and if there was, we cannot conceive how it could be redressed on error.
It is enacted by the twenty-fifth section of the eighth chapter of the act “ Regulating punishments under the Penitentiary System,” “ Where an original and alias writ of scire facias issued upon a judgment nisi, rendered at the instance of the state, upon a forfeited recognizance, shall be returned 1 not found,’ such return shall be equivalent to the personal service of the process, and authorise the Court in which the judgment nisi was rendered, to make the same absolute: Provided, that such writs shall have been returned by the proper officer of the couuty, in which the forfeited recognizance shall have been entered into or acknowledged.” This enactment is of a recent date, and abrogates the decision in Hayter v. The State, which was cited for the plaintiffs, and shows that it is not indispensable to the regularity of the proceeding, that process should be personally served on the parties.
The result is, that for the insufficiency of the judgment nisi, the confirmatory judgment cannot be sustained; it is consequently reversed, and the cause remanded.