The opinion of the court was delivered by
GibsoN, C. J.Cases analogous to the present, have been decided on the provisions of the arbitration law of 1809, which dircc-*476ted a recognizance to be acknowledged with condition to pay the debt and costs, “or surrender the defendant to the goal of the proper county.” Yet it was determined in Carpentier v. The Delaware Insurance Company, 2 Binney, 264, that a corporation was entitled to appeal without such recognizance, because the bail would not have' had the advantage of all its conditions, inasmuch, as a corporation is an artificial body, that cannot be surrendered; and in the Germantown and Perkiomen Turnpike Company v. Naglee, 9 Serg. & Rawle, 227, a like construction was made of the clause on which the present question arises. Although an appeal by a corporation has since been particularly provided for in the act of the 22d of March, 1817, by directing a recognizance with condition to pay whatever shall be recovered,the preceding decisions are entitled to entire respect, in determining the general question of construction. But the case of a female is attempted to be distinguished from what the case of a corporation was previous to the last mentioned act, inasmuch as her exemption from arrest as secured by the act of the 8th of February, 1819, would present no natural impediment to actual surrender of her person, to give her bail, the benefit of all the. conditions of the recognizance. Butin the case of special bail, whose responsibility is precisely that of the surety of an appellant under the act in question, a principal privileged from commitment in execution is never actually surrendered, the law esteeming it nugatory to surrender one who" would be instantly discharged; and the practice therefore is to enter, at once, an exoneretur on the bail-piece. There is, then, a potential, if not actual impediment to the surrender of a female, whose privilege under the act of 1809, can be made as extensively beneficial as it was intended to be, only by preventing her from incurring responsibilities, that would be inconsistent with the full enjoyment of it. In the Pennsylvania Insurance Company v. Jinthony’s Executors, 5 Binney 508, a construction perfectly analogous, was made in the case of an appeal by executors under' the arbitration law of 1810, who were allowed to appeal without bail, though their persons might’ readily have been surrendered in discharge of the usual recognizance. There is, perhaps, still greater reason to exempt the appellant here, as an arrest by her bail, even for form’s sake, would be in some measure a violation of a statutory principle; and as her appeal was allowed on terms which the law did not warrant, the arbitrators erred in sustaining a suit on the recognizance.
Judgment reversed.