The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
Emery J.The defendant, McDonald, was arrested and committed on execution in favor of the plaintiffs, on the twenty-first of August, 1838, notified the jailer of his poverty, and desired him to apply to some justice of the peace, to notify the creditor of his intention of taking the poor debtor’s oath, and the jailer, on the same day, applied to a justice to cite the creditors to hear him take the benefit of an act for the relief of poor debtors. They were cited to appear on the fifth day of September following. The defendant continued in close jail till the twenty-third day of August, 1838, when he gave the bond now in suit, and on the fifth day of September, took the oath.
The condition of the bond, after reciting, that “ whereas said Eli McDonald hath been, and now is, arrested by virtue of the plaintiff’s execution,” concludes in this way : “ Now if the said Eli McDonald shall, in six months from the time of executing this bond, cite the said John Williams al., the creditors, before two justices of the peace and of the quorum, and submit himself to examination, as is prescribed in the tenth section of an act, entitled £ an act for the relief of poor debtors,’ passed March 24th, A. D. 1835, and take the oath or affirmation, as provided in the seventh section of an act, entitled £ an act supplementary to an act for the relief of poor debtors,’ passed April 2d, A. D. 1836, or pay the debt, interest, and costs, and fees arising in said execution, *122or be delivered in custody of the jailer within said time, then the said obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force.”
The facts admitted do not disclose a literal, nor indeed a substantial performance of the condition of the bond. If we were to consider the first notice1, given before the execution of the bond, effectual after the execution of the bond, it. would be going against the direct language of the condition. The giving of the bond assumes a new state of engagements which the debtor has the right to make. He might, notwithstanding the citation, omit to appear to take the oath at the expiration of the time first appointed, if lie should elect so to do. And if, after the citation, he proffer to the creditor, before that period, his bond, conditioned that he shall, after its execution, cite the creditor, we know no reason why the creditor should not believe him. The creditors might well suppose that the debtor, for some good reason, intended to take further time, and we think, under the circumstances of this case, it must necessarily be a waiver of the first notice. They could not be bound to attend, and cannot be bound by the doings of the debtor.
According to the agreement of the parties, the defendant must be defaulted, and judgment be rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, for debt, interest, costs and fees.
This does not conflict, as we apprehend, with former decisions, on account of the dissimilarity of facts from any other case which comes to our recollection.