Fullerton v. Harris

Mellen C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case presents several questions for consideration, viz :

1st. Is an action of debt a proper action to be brought against a sheriff or his deputy, or prison keeper for a voluntary escape of a prisoner committed on execution for d.ebt ?

2d. If it isj can the plaintiff recover the full amount of the execution, or only such damages as a jury may estimate under all tb© circumstances of the case ?

3d. Was the bond, in virtue of which Lee, the debtor, was liberated from prison, duly executed by the obligors, so as to be their deed?

4th. If so, was it approved by two Justices of the peace, in such a manner as to become a proper ground on which Harris, the defendant, could lawfully proceed to. act in the liberation of Lee from confinement?

5th. Was Harris the lawful under-keeper of the prison when Lee-was committed and till he was liberated, so as to have a right to de-. tain him ; or, in other words, was Harris answerable to any one for permitting Lee to go at large, if the bond was not so executed and. approved, as to constitute a legal defence?

6th. Was the evidence, which was objected to by the counsel for-the defendant, properly admitted ?

As to the first and second questions above stated, we apprehend there is no room for legal doubt. The statute of Westm. 2, expressly gives an action of debt; and it seems to be familiar law th.at a creditor may elect to bring debt or case as he shall think proper, And it seems also to be well settled, that when he brings debt, he is entitled to recover the full amount of his debt and costs; that is, the amount due on the execution. In support of the principles thus stated, we will merely cite the following cases. Bonafous v. Walker, 2 T. R. 126; Planck v. Andrews, 5 T. R. 37; Burrell v. Lithgow, 2 Mass. 526; Colby v. Sampson, 5 Mass. 310; Porter v. *397Sayward, 7 Mass. 377; Burroughs v. Lowder, 8 Mass. 373; Rawson v. Dole, 2 Johns. 454; Speake v. United States, 9 Crunch, 28; Wooly & al. v. Constant, 4 Johns. 55. There seems to be, at the present day, little or no reason for the above mentioned distinction between an action of the case and an action of debt for an escape on execution, whether voluntary or negligent, as to the amount to be recovered; but the court can only declare what the law is. It is the province of the legislature to abolish the foregoing distinction, should that measure be deemed expedient. It would seem adaped to promote the ends of justice, if a creditor, in all cases of escape of a debtor, committed on execution, should be required to seek his remedy by a special action on the case, and in no other mode whatever.

With respect also to the third question, we perceive no room for doubt or hesitation, inasmuch as the jury have distinctly found, that though at the time the bond was signed by Lee and his sureties, the several blanks, mentioned in the report, existed and remained until it was presented to Harris, as a preliminary to the liberation of Lee, yet that they were all filled up by the consent and authority of the principal and sureties ; which was prior to the delivery of the bond to Harris. Markham v. Goraston, Moor, 547; Zouch v. Clay, 1 Ventr. 185; Paget v. Paget, 2 Ch. R. 187; Smith v. Crocker, 5 Mass. 538; Hunt v. Adams, 6 Mass. 519; Hale v. Rust, 1 Greenl. 334. According to these cases, a bond executed and completed in the manner mentioned in the report of the Judge, is as binding an instrument as if it had been executed in the usual manner, and made perfect in all respects before signature.

The next inquiry is whether the bond was duly approved by two Justices of the peace, quorum unus, as prescribed in the fourth section of the act of 1822, chap. 209, or by the creditor ? If it was, the above section says “ the gaol keeper shall release him (the debt- or) from close confinement, without requiring any other condition in such bond.” No responsibility is thrown upon the gaol keeper, as to ihe sufficiency of the sureties. The Justices or the creditor must judge of that. The gaol keeper is to be governed by their *398certificate, and he is not bound to inquire into their motives in making the certificate, or into the facts on which their certificate was predicated. It is true that, in the present case, the certificate of approbation was indorsed after the bond was signed, but before the above mentioned blanks in the bond were filled, when no penal sum was inserted, nor the amount of the judgment; but it does not appear that the defendant knew of any misapprehensions of the Justices in regard to its amount, even if their errors or carelessness could affect him. He must be considered as acting under the natural conclusion that they acted understand ingly in the discharge of the duty by law assigned them, and in making the certificate of their judgment in the premises; for the names of the sureties, at least, were signed before the certificate of approbation was indorsed. The obligors must be considered as understanding that all blanks were to be filled before delivery to the gaol keeper; and the same presumption applies as to the understanding "with which the Justices made their certificate. No doubt the above course of proceeding in relation to the execution and approval was a very careless and improper one; subjecting all concerned to inconveniences and perhaps dangerous consequences; but, we repeat, the gaol keeper is not answerable for this looseness of proceeding on the part of the approving Justices, in signing their approbation, without ascertaining the sum due on the execution. Viewing all the facts in regard to the approval of the sureties by the Justices, we are of opinion that the gaol keeper was fully justified in releasing Lee from his confinement upon the strength of it. Why would he not have been liable in damages to Lee for false imprisonment, had he not restored Lee to his liberty ? In the examination of this fourth question, we have, by anticipation, decided the merits of the sixth objection; that is, that the explanatory depositions of Jllden and Page were not by law admissible. Having made their certificate and permitted the debtor to carry it to the defendant, where the blanks in the bond were filled in the manner before mentioned, they had given to him that protection which was intended by that provision of our statute which requires the approbation of two Justices of the peace as to *399the sufficiency of sureties. The defendant, confiding in the legal ■protection thus given, released the prisoner. For these reasons the Justices could not be allowed to contradict or explain away their own certificate, disprove the facts certified, and thus expose an innocent officer to a severe penalty, because he reposed confidence in their official sanction. Applying legal principles to the facts which we have thus been examining, the result is, that the action is riot maintainable. It is therefore unnecessary for us to express any opinion as to the fifth question, or the incidental one connected with it; and as it is unnecessary, it may be advisable for us to be silent in respect to it, as questions between other parties may call for a decision of it.

Verdict set aside, and a general verdict entered for the defendant.

Note. The remedy by action of debt for an escape is now abolished, by a statute passed Jan. 21, 1834.