Hogg v. Bloodworth

Hall, Judge.

For every failure in a sheriff like the one now complained of, the court, by their order, may direct & to be paid to the party grieved, unless, lays the act of Assembly, such sheriff can shew sufficient cause to the court, at the next succeeding term after such order. It is contended for the defendant, that if the sheriff being called in by sci. fa. enters his plea thereto, that he has, as a matter of tight? till the next court, to procure testimony to support it. I cannot agree with that construction of the act; it expressly says, he shall have till the succeeding court after the order is made, to shew cause, act of 1777, ch. 8. sec. 5. If he was not to shew cause, or make any defence at that court, the order would become absolute; that, and no other, is the court assigned him to make his defence. If he could not procure testimony, and was to make out a proper case for a continuance, the court would grant it.-It is not like the case of a plea entered in a common suit; there time is expressly given till the next court by the act of Assembly, but that is not the case in the act that *479governs this question. He must either shew cause at the first court, or make out a proper case for a continuance till the next; but he cannot have that indulgence as a matter of course.

Macay, Taylor & Locke, Judges, concurred in opinion with Judge Hall, that the verdict was regularly taken, and ought to stand.