delivered the opinion of the Coma.
The first assignment of Errors is that the instrument, on which the scire facias was sued out, is not a recognizance,
^ aPPears fr°m the Record that Lloyd and others were indicted for an affray. Three of them were convicted, and. received the judgment of the law. There next appears something in the shape of a Bond of Lloyd and his securities, conditioned for his appearance at the next term of the Circuit Court to answer, &c. &e. This Bond does not appear to have been taken in a Court of Record, or before a Justice of the peace or of the quorum, and certified to the next Circuit Court, as required by the Statute (Miss. Digest, 323.) A recognizance is an obligation of Record entered into before some Court of Record or magistrate, duly au-thorised, with a condition to do a particular act. (Tidd’s P. 984.) The instrument or Bond in question, does not appear to have been taken in a Court of Record, or by a magistrate, or received with a single ingredient necessary to make it a recognizance within the meaning of the law. For aught that appeal’s, it may have been gratuitously filed. Our conclusion on the first assignment, would dispose of the case : but we have deemed it advisable, in order to settle a question of practice, to dispose also of the second assignment, which presents this question: In proceedings crimináliter, have we any law authorizing a scire facias 1
A sci. fa. has been defined, a judicial writ,, founded on some matter of record, as a judgment or recognizance, for the purpose of obtaining Execution. (Bac. Ab. title, scire facias.) It is said to be an original Writ when founded on a recognizance; and at common Law it could always issue on a recognizance. (6 Bac. Ab. 103, &c.) The recognizance is a contract between the cognizor, on the one part, and the State, by its officers, on the other. If the cognizor breaks the contract, by failing to perform the condition, he forfeits *35the penalty. The remedy is notjby criminal process, butjfor the specific penalty, for breach of the contract. If the sci. fa. would not lie, -on a recognizance in a State case, the judgment in the first instance would be final and not nisi, and Execution would issue thereonf The sci. fa. though void, would be but surplusage, not affecting the judgment. The law requires recognizances to be certified to the Circuit Courts, and that these Courts shall “ award process for levying, as ■“ well of such fines, forfeitures and amercements as' shall “ be estreated, &c. as of the fines, forfeitures and amerce- “ ments -which shall be taxed and set there, and. not paid.” (Turner’s Digest, Laws Ala. 154, s. 1.) The Statutes have not prescribed any particular form of process. It is perfectly competent for the Circuit Courts to award the writ of sci. fa. or any other form of process, which would give notice to the defendant to appear and shew why there, should not be final judgment against him. It is the opinion of the Court that the second assignment caimot.be sustained, but that the judgment must.be reversed on.the first.