Norfolk v. People

Mr. Chief Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

It is urged, that this judgment is erroneous, because a- forfeiture was not taken at the term to which the accused was recognized to appear. That term was not held, and unless in such cases this proceeding, like others, stands continued, there is no authority to render a judgment of forfeiture. The third section of the chapter entitled “ Courts,” (E. S. 143) declares, that, if from any cause the court shall not sit at any term, or shall not sit until all of the business of the term shall be disposed of and determined, all matters and causes pending in the court and undetermined, shall stand continued until the next succeeding term. This was most undoubtedly such a matter or cause as stood continued, under the provisions of this section.

The case, then, stood on the docket for trial, in precisely the same condition as other undisposed of causes. The demurrer only questions the sufficiency of such matters as appear upon the record itself, or such as are necessarily implied by the law. This scire facias shows the examination of the accused by a competent court of inquiry, the execution of the recognizance, its becoming a matter of record, and its forfeiture, at a regular term of the court. It, however, fails to aver that there was no March Term held in that year. Nor does it show that there was a July Special Term. The averment is, that a default was entered at the September Term, 1865. The regular terms of the Circuit Courts are fixed by law, and the courts in the State are bound to judicially know when they are required to be held, and, as the duty of holding them is imposed by law, the presumption will be indulged, that they were held at the time required, unless it is rebutted.

The court cannot judicially know that a regular term was not held, or that a Special Term had been called, and held in any circuit. They are facts that are not presumed to exist, and, although liable to occur, must be averred and proved when they do exist. This being so, the question is then fairly presented, whether the people were bound to take a forfeiture at the first term of the court held after the recognizance was executed. It seems, at the common law, to have been the practice to require the forfeiture to be taken on the day the accused was recognized to appear, or, at least, during the term. And, if our statute has not changed the practice, such might be held in our courts to be required. But, by the tenth section of the act entitled “ Courts,” before referred to, it is declared, that, if the court shall fail to sit the whole of the term, and matters and causes pending in the court are not determined, or if all matters and causes are not determined at the end of the term, such matters or causes are declared to he continued to the next regular term. This case, being a cause, and pending and undetermined at the end of the March Term, fell fully within the provisions of the act, and was thereby continued till the next regular term, at which .time the forfeiture was declared. It follows that the forfeiture was regularly taken, and the court committed no error in overruling the demurrer.

If the securities wished to release themselves from further liability, they only had to surrender their principal. This they could have done at any time, either in term or vacation. The continuance could, therefore, produce no injury to the bail, as they, if unwilling to be longer bound, could at the regular term or in vacation, before or after that time, have surrendered him to the sheriff. Having failed to do so, and the recognizance being an undetermined matter in court, it was continued, and the liability of the bail unaffected.

The judgment of the court below must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.