Tbe action was instituted by E. L. Sutton and bis wife against John Williams, R. B. Lane, sheriff, and tlie Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland; but by leave of court the summons and the complaint were amended and the action was prosecuted on the relation of the State. It was thenceforth treated as a suit against the sheriff and the surety on his official bond. When the demurrers of these two defendants were sustained the plaintiffs made no motion for judgment against Williams, the remaining defendant; so the only matter in controversy is the judgment of the court. The plaintiffs insist that the demurrers should have been overruled.
The defendant Williams was convicted of a crime in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of North Carolina, sentenced.to imprisonment, and committed to the custody of Sheriff Lane. It was the duty of the officer to receive him and to commit him to the common jail of Craven County. O. S., 1349. The sheriff has the care and custody of the jail in' his county and appoints the keeper. 0. S., 3944.
At common law if a jailer permitted the escape of a prisoner lawfully committed to his custody the sheriff had to answer for the default. 1 BL, 346; 1 Hale Pleas of the Crown, 596; 2 Hawk. Pleas of the Crown, ch. 19, sec. 28 et seq. It was so because the jailer was regarded as the sheriff’s agent or deputy; and now, as a general rule, subject of course to exceptions, a sheriff is liable for the act or omission of his deputy as he is for his own. S. v. Roane, 24 N. C., 144; Tarkinton v. Hassell, 27 N. C., 359; Hanie v. Penland, 194 N. C., 234. Both the sheriff and the jailer may be liable for an escape. If any person charged with a crime or sentenced by the court upon conviction of any offense is legally committed to a sheriff or jailer and is wilfully or negligently suffered by such officer to escape, the officer so offending, being duly convicted thereof, shall be removed from office and shall be fined or imprisoned, and may be both fined.and imprisoned, in the discretion of the court. C. S., 4393.
Considered in its double aspect “escape” is an offense which may be committed by the prisoner or by the officer who has him in custody. Accordingly, the word has been defined as “the unlawful departure of a prisoner from the limits of his custody”; “an unlawful withdrawal from arrest or imprisonment”; “the wrongful liberation of a prisoner or relaxation of his imprisonment through the neglect or malfeasance of the officer in charge.” It is effected “when one who is arrested gains his liberty before he is delivered in due course of law.” S. v. Johnson, *54994 N. C., 924; S. v. Ritchie, 107 N. C., 857; Brady v. Hughes, 181 N. C., 234; New International Dictionary; New Standard Dictionary.
Tbe law presupposes tbat every person committed to jail by due process, unless tbe judgment or a statute provides otherwise, is to be kept in arcta, et salva custodia, in close and safe custody; but according to tbe allegations of tbe complaint, which by demurring tbe defendants admit, tbe sheriff and tbe jailer permitted Williams to go at large. In doing so they suffered an escape. Winbourne v. Mitchell, 111 N. C., 13. They cannot justify on tbe ground tbat Williams was a “trusty.” There is nothing in tbe record showing tbe necessity of a relaxation of tbe law in behalf of these officers; Williams was not released from prison to do public work, as tbe prisoner was in S. v. Johnson, supra. But even in tbat event, as tbe court there held, it would have been their duty to keep Williams in view and under direct control.
Tbe question for decision, however, is whether tbe sheriff’s official bond is liable in damages to tbe plaintiffs for injury caused by tbe negligence of Williams while be was permitted to be at large.
Tbe Eevisal of 1908, sec. 298, contained a special provision for bonds to be executed by tbe sheriff of Craven County, but tbe provision was left out of C. S., 3930. Tbe principal difference is in the penalty of tbe bonds. C. S., 3930, requires of sheriffs tbe execution of three bonds: One for tbe collection and settlement of State taxes; one for tbe settlement and collection of county and other local taxes; and one for tbe due execution and return of process, payment of fees and moneys collected, and tbe faithful execution of tbe office. This process bond contains tbe following provision: “Tbe condition of the above obligation is such tbat, whereas tbe above-bounden. is elected and appointed sheriff of . County; if, therefore, be shall well and truly execute and due return make of all process and precepts to him directed, and pay and satisfy all fees and sums of money by him received or levied by virtue of any process into tbe proper office into wbicb tbe same, by tbe tenor thereof, ought to be paid, or to tbe person to whom tbe same shall be due, bis executors, administrators, attorneys, or agents; and in all other things well and truly and faithfully execute tbe said office of sheriff during bis continuance therein, then tbe above obligation to be void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”
Tbe bond in suit is within tbe class last named. It does not provide for tbe collection of taxes, public or private. Its condition is tbat tbe “principal shall well and faithfully perform all and singular tbe duties incumbent upon him by reason of bis election or appointment as said sheriff.” Tbe statute (C. S., 3930), prescribes substantially this provision for bonds given for tbe due execution and return of process, etc. It will be observed tbat tbe bond sued on contains tbe latter part, but *550not the first part of this condition, namely, that the officer should “well and truly execute and due return make of all process and precepts to him directed,” etc. But, notwithstanding a variance in the condition of the bond from the provision prescribed by law, the bond may be put in suit as if the condition had conformed to the provisions of the statute. C. S., 324. It is contended that these provisions are constructively included in the bond and that they limit its scope and bear directly upon the question whether the injury complained of resulted from a breach of the sheriff’s official obligation. If an official bond is given for a specific object general words are to be construed with reference to that object. In Eaton v. Kelly, 72 N. C., 110, suit was brought on a bond the conditions of which were substantially the same as those prescribed for the process bond in C. S., 3930, and the Court, holding that the sheriff was not officially responsible, said: “It cannot be contended that the breach complained of comes within the first clause of this condition, which is for the due return of process, and the payment of all moneys collected, to the proper parties. If the breach complained of is covered by the bond at all, it can be only by the broad, comprehensive and general clause, for ‘truly and faithfully, in all things, performing the duties of sheriff.’ There are many decisions on the effect of these words. It may now be considered as settled, that they relate only to the true and faithful performance of the sheriff’s duty, in the matters above separately mentioned; that is, in the return of process and the payment of money received by virtue of it, etc. To give to these words the extended signification contended for on the part of the plaintiff, would render unnecessary any other words than these, as comprehending every violation of official duty in the condition of the bond declared on; and would also render it superfluous for the sheriff to give bond for the collection and proper payment of taxes, State or municipal. Every duty of the sheriff might be comprehended in these general words if they were not restricted by those which go before and designate the subject-matter to which these are to apply.”
The principle thus stated is upheld in Crumpler v. Governor, 12 N. C., 52; Governor v. Matlock, ibid., 214; S. v. Long, 30 N. C., 415; S. v. Brown, 33 N. C., 141; Prince v. McNeill, 77 N. C., 398. If the principle is available to the defendants under C. S., 324, the general clause in the bond will be limited by the preceding conditions to the execution and return of process and precepts and the payment of money received or levied by virtue of process. In that event the present action of course could not be maintained.
But, without regard to this, there is another view which is fatal to the contention of the plaintiffs. Accepting the condition of the bond as it is written, we are of opinion that it does not impose on the surety an *551obligation that thé sheriff should do no wrong and should in all respects observe the law. The phrase “performing the duties incumbent upon him by reason of his election or appointment as sheriff” obviously means the duties incumbent upon him in the execution of his office. As said by Chief Justice Muffin, in S. v. Long, supra, the sheriff and his surety “are liable upon a contract expressed in definite terms, and their liability cannot be carried beyond the fair meaning of those terms.” The general clause “only binds the officer affirmatively to the faithful execution of the duties of his office and does not cover the case of an abuse or usurpation of power. There are no negative words that the sheriff will commit no wrong by color of his office, nor do anything not authorized by law.” This construction was afterwards approved in S. v. Brown, supra. From the fact that an officer may be indicted for neglect or refusal to perform a public duty it does not follow that he is liable therefor in a civil action. In South v. Maryland, 18 Howard, 396, 15 Law Ed., 433, an action on the official bond of a sheriff for default in the discharge of a public duty, the Court applied the following principle and denied the plaintiff’s alleged right to recover damages : “When the sheriff is punishable by indictment for a misdemeanor, in eases of a breach of some public duty, his sureties are not bound to suffer in his place, or to indemnify individuals for the consequences of such a criminal neglect. It is an undisputed principle of the common law, that for a breach of a public duty, an officer is punishable by indictment; but where he acts ministerially, and is bound to render certain services to individuals, for a compensation in fees or salary, he is liable for acts of misfeasance or nonfeasance to the party who is injured by them.” By virtue of our statute, as above stated, a sheriff or jailer allowing a prisoner who is legally committed to escape is subject to indictment, C. S., 4393; and in case of an escape or rescue -from arrest in a civil action the official bond of the sheriff may be liable. C. S., 789, 790; McIntosh’s N. C. Pr. & Procedure, 915.
In this case the official bond of the sheriff is not responsible for the injury suffered by the plaintiffs and the demurrers were properly sustained.
Whether the sheriff is personally liable for injury proximately resulting from the negligence of Williams is a question we are not called upon to decide. The complaint is not specific on the point whether Williams at the time of the injury was on an errand for the jailer or the sheriff; and the allegation that he drove the ear.with the authority and consent of the sheriff, if construed most strongly against the sheriff, would raise a question only as to his personal liability. An officer may be liable personally although not liable on his bond. Holt v. McLean, 75 N. C., 347. Judgment
Affirmed.