delivered the opinion of the court.
FT. C. Watts, plaintiff in error, who was, on the 15th day of June, 1900, sheriff of the county of Augusta, and as such, by virtue of section 934 of the Code, keeper of the jail of said county, was on February 19, 1901, indicted for negligently suffering D. H. Taylor, a prisoner lawfully committed to his custody, to escape. A copy of this indictment was, in accordance with section 4106 of the Code, as amended by an act of 1897-8 (Acts 1897-’8, p. 289), certified to the Police Justice of Staunton, before whom "Watts was tried, convicted and fined $50. From this judgment he appealed to the Hustings Court, assigning numerous errors, among others, that the indictment was not endorsed “a true bill,” and the Hustings Court, overruling all other objections to the indictment, but being of opinion that it was necessary to its validity that it should be so endorsed, set aside the judgment of the justice, and directed the clerk to forthwith certify a true copy as found by the grand jury, which was done. The copy thus certified contains the endorsement “a true 'bill. Ernest FTothnagje, foreman.”
It is unnecessary for us to' express an opinion upon the propriety of setting aside the judgment for this cause, but we may at this point dispose of one contention of the plaintiff in error, which is, that the judgment of the justice from which he appealed, and which was set aside upon his 'assignment of a purely formal error in the proceedings, entitled him to' an acquittal. That was not a trial upon the merits, and it was set aside at his instance. It is hardly necessary to cite authority to show that these facts constitute no bar to a further prosecution.-
*874Watts was again tried upon this indictment, and a judgment rendered against him, imposing a. fine of $50, from which judgment 'he appealed to the Hustings Court, where he was tried before a jury, found guilty of a misdemeanor, and a fine imposed against him of $50, upon which the court entered judgment.
The case is now before us upon errors assigned to the rulings-of the Hustings Co-urt.
It is contended by plaintiff in error that he was convicted' without a warrant, and without indictment against him.
It is urged that the indictment under section 4106 takes the place of a warrant, and constitutes the authority upon which the-justice proceeds, 'and it is contended that it does not appear from the record that the grand jury ever found an indictment in this case, and the judgment of the General Court in Cawood’s Case, 2 Va. Cases, 527, is relied upon to establish that proposition.
It was there held that “when a bill of indictment is found by the grand jury -and endorsed ‘a true bill’ by the foreman, it should be brought into court, presented by the grand jury, and then the finding should be recorded;” that “an omission to-record the finding cannot be supplied by a paper purporting to-be an indictment, with an endorsement, ‘a true bill,’ signed by the person who was the foreman of the grand jury a.t that term. Hor can it be supplied by the recital in the- record that he-stands indicted, nor by his 'arraignment, nor by his plea of not guilty. It -cannot be intended that- he was indicted. It must be shown by the record of the finding. The recording of the finding of the grand jury is as essential as the recording of the verdict of the jury.”
To these propositions we have nothing to object, but the case-before us is easily distinguished from that upon which counsel relies. It appears from this record that the following entry Avas made upon the records of the Hustings Court: “ September 6, 1900. Ordered that the indictment presented by the grand' jury against H. C. Watts for misdemeanor be certified to the *875Police Justice of this city, to he by him disposed of according to law. A copy—teste: Mewton Argenbright, clerk.”
There is a case almost identical with the one under consideration, also reported in 2 Va. Cases, at page 160, Myers v. Commonwealth, where the defendant was presented for unlawful gaming, the entry on the minute book being as follows:
“ Ordered that Joshua Myers, who. was this day presented by the grand jury, be summoned to appear here at May court next to answer the said presentment.”
On the trial the defendant pleaded that there was no record of' the supposed presentment which he was summoned to answer,, remaining in said court; but the court held that there was such record, and judgment was rendered for the fine, the court being-of opinion, that the minute book of the clerk obviously referred to the written presentment made by the grand jury, which presentment itself was á part of the records of the court.
This case seems to be directly in point, and is conclusive of the first assignment of error.
It is assigned as error that the indictment is demurrable. We are of opinion that this indictment sufficiently recites the indictment, trial and conviction of D. H. Taylor; that he was in the proper legal custody of plaintiff in error at the time of bis escape, and that the escape was the result of the negligence of plaintiff in error. There is nothing in the record from which it can be inferred that the indictment was amended by the Hustings 'Court, or the clerk thereof. It does appear that as originally certified to the Police Justice it was an incomplete copy, in that it omitted an endorsement which, in the judgment of the Hustings Court, was ne'eessary to its validity as an indictment, but that endorsement was not interpolated by authority of the Hustings Court, or its clerk, but the clerk, upon the order of the court, prepared and certified a true copy, in which the omitted endorsement appeared.
The objections to which we have alluded are all stated as *876grounds of demurrer. It is obvious that the greater part of them could not with propriety be considered upon demurrer, but could be presented only by a motion to quash, or a proper plea. The indictment was, we think, sufficient, and the demurrer properly overruled.
It is also assigned as error that the Hustings 'Court did not set aside the verdict of the jury as contrary to the law and the evidence, and here the objection is reiterated that there was no indictment or warrant upon which to found the case, 'and no charge of any offence. This we have already sufficiently considered. Secondly, that it does not appear from the evidence that Taylor was in the lawful custody of appellant at the time he escaped; and, third, that if Taylor was in the lawful custody of the deputy sheriff, plaintiff in error is not liable.
It is charged in the indictment, and shown by the evidence, that D. H. Taylor was tried at the July term of the County Court of Augusta county, in the year 1899, for breaking into an out-house in the night time, and stealing two turkeys and live chickens; that for this offence he was found guilty by the jury, and sentenced to confinement in the county jail for twelve months from the 29th day of July, 1899, and to pay a fine of $100; that on the 15th of June, 1900, while the said judgment still remained in full force, he escaped and is still at large. During all this period, plaintiff in error was sheriff of Augusta county, and, as such, by virtue of section 934 of the Code, the keeper of its jail. It is true that sheriffs are authorized by section 817 to appoint deputies in the manner therein prescribed, who are authorized to discharge any of the official duties of the principal during the continuance of his office, unless it be some duty the performance of which by a deputy is expressly prohibited by law. There is no doubt that the duty imposed upon the sheriff to be the keeper of the jail may be performed by his deputy, and in fact is, as a rule, entrusted to him. It remains, however, that the sheriff is the keeper of the jail, and the legal *877custodian, of those who are lawfully confined in it. It is true that he is not criminally responsible for the acts of his deputy or agent. As was said by the General Court in Commonwealth v. Lewis, 4 Leigh 666: “ This is, in fact, a criminal proceeding' against a high sheriff for the negligence or misfeasance of his deputy;” and the court very properly held that the sheriff was not criminally liable for such negligence or misfeasance, and directed an acquittal.
In this case, Watts is not charged with any offence committed by his deputy, but that he “unlawfully did negligently suffer him, the said D. H. Taylor, to escape from his, said H. C. Watts’ custody, and to go at large, against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Virginia.” The charge against him is of his own personal negligence, and not the imputed negligence of his deputy or agent.
It appears from the instructions given by the Hustings Court that it fully recognized the principle announced in Commonwealth v. Lewis, supra. The first instruction given is, “that the sheriff, as such, is, by virtue of his office, jailer, but with power to appoint a deputy to discharge the duties thus devolved on him, and he is not criminally liable for the acts of such deputy, unless he actually concurred in and directed them, in which case he must be regarded as having recalled the authority theretofore given by him to his deputy, and to■ have committed the act himself.”
It appears from the evidence of Thomas A. Dawson, doubtless an honest, but certainly not an unfriendly witness, that he was the deputy sheriff of Augusta county, duly appointed by Watts, the sheriff, and as such he was in charge of the jail; that in July, 1899, Taylor was committed to his custody and received into the jail, and that he escaped on the 12th day of June, 1900, his term of imprisonment not having at that time expired. In answer to the question as to how he got away, Dawson replied: “We had him working around the jail there, and about 1 o’clock *878•on that clay, after I finished supper, I went to look him up and found that he was gone.” Q. “ H© was then outside the jail?” A. “ Yes, sir; he was not locked up-. When I went to supper, I left him in the lower part of the jail, but he was not locked up.” Q. “ Was this the first time that he had been turned out?” A. “Yo, sir; we had him working around the jail there for some time.”
It appears that the liberty allowed the prisoner was not only notorious in the community, hut was offensive to certain citizens, .and that complaint was made. It seems that the deputy talked with Watts and with the county judge upon the subject, and that the judge said to him that “he saw no impropriety in letting him out in the day-time, and locking him up in the night-time. After this I talked with Watts, and he told me the same thing that the judge did. Hr. Watts told me that he talked with the .judge, and that Judge Chalkley told him the same thing he told me.” ’
Judge Ohallcley, recalling the conversation which he had with. Watts, said: “ I saw Watts, and had a talk with him, and told Mm that certain citizens had come to me with the complaint that Taylor was allowed to go about the streets, and in the -county, and that the sight of him in the county had incensed these people. This complaint was made to me about six weeks -or two months before I saw Hr. Watts. I had nothing to do with it except as ‘go- between.’ I saw Watts and told him the ■conrplaint, and suggested to him and advised that this man be Tept ont of sight of the p-ublic. I do not remember if I advised Hr. Watts that he should he locked up in jail, but that he should he kept -out of sight of the public. I think we had a conversation about letting tMs man work about the jail, and I gave my consent to that. Watts represented to me that he was a very valuable man, and I advised Hr. Watts to keep the man ont of fh.e sight of the public.”
Watts was put upon the stand, and his evidence differs in no *879material respect from that of Judge Chalkley and Dawson. His account of the interview between the judge and himself is as follows:
“I went to Hewport Hews that night-—that was on the 28th •of May—and when I came back the judge came down to my office and knocked on the Avindow and asked me to come to his •office, and I Avent up there, and he told me about the complaint that Avas being made about this man going out in the county, .and that he Avas running at large. I told him that I had the man out working, and that he (the judge) gave his authority, and I said that I thought it ought to be looked up. The judge said for me to keep him doAvn below, and not let him out on the ■street.”
It appears from this testimony that Watts not only had full knoAvledge that the prisoner was being suffered to go at large, but that it Avas done Avith his full approbation, by his authority, and under his direction. His statement in the quotation from Ms evidence just made in wMch he gives an account of the interview between himself and the judge of the Coiinty Court, in wMch he uses this language: “I told Mm that I had the man working, and that the judge gave his authority, and I said that I thought it ought to be looked up,” is sufficient to warrant, the jury in finding not only knowledge and acquiescence, but the active participation in the offence charged, sufficient of itself to sustain the verdict of the jury.
That the offence Avas committed, there is no doubt; that a prisoner in laAvful custody Avas by the official charged Avith his care negligently suffered to escape, cannot be questioned. If Watts be not responsible, then the offence must go unpunished, for it would be a harsh judgment which would acquit the principal and punish the deputy who had acted within the line of duty approved -by, and indeed, prescribed to him by his superior •officer.
It is suggested that the facts could not do more than make *880Watts an accessory before the fact; bnt “at common law, in misdemeanors, there are no accessories, all concerned being principals.” 1 Wharton’s Criminal Law, sec. 223. But we do not rest our judgment upon that doctrine. Watts was indicted for his own dereliction in the performance of his duty; the jury, upon proper instruction, found him guilty, and the evidence, in our opinion, sustains their verdict.
The judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.