Ancrum v. Sloan

30 S.C.L. 421
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1845
StatusPublished

This text of 30 S.C.L. 421 (Ancrum v. Sloan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ancrum v. Sloan, 30 S.C.L. 421 (S.C. Ct. App. 1845).

Opinions

Curia, per

Butler, J.

This ease presents some interesting points, and they have received that attention which their practical importance demands.

The questions to be considered in the judgment of the court are these:

[422]*4221st. When a ca. sa. has been issued against the principal, can non est inventus be returned on it for the purpose of fixing the liability of bail, before the return day mentioned in the execution itself?

2d. What is the return day of final process in this State?

3d. What are the rights of the bail de jure, and what favors may be extended to them ex gratia, during the pendency of proceedings against the principal, and after an action has been commenced on the bail bond ?

These questions have been collaterally noticed, and, to some extent, adjudged in some of our decisions; but they have been left in so much doubt and confusion, as to render an authoritative judgment on them necessary.

1. No action can be commenced against the bail until they are fixed by a ca. sa. and non est returned upon it, against the principal. The lodging of the ca. sa. must operate as an advertisement to the bail, that their principal must be surrendered from their supposed custody, in exoneration of their liability. This is a continuing notice, till non est inventus is actually returned ; and to make it availing, it should not depend on the caprice of the- plaintiff, or the partiality of the sheriff. Its uniformity, regulated by law, seems to be essential to its efficacy in affording the relief and security contemplated.. And during the time the ca. sa. is in the sheriff’s hands, and before it is legally returned, the bail must have the right to look for and surrender their principal. This length of time should not,depend on the discretion of the officer, but ought to be contained in the directions of the process, under the authority of law. When the process is executed, by the actual arrest of the defendant under it, then its office is exhausted ; but when it is not, in fact, thus executed, the sheriff must perform his duty under it, by making such search as will satisfy him that he cannot find the defendant. In some cases he may perform this service the day after the process has been lodged, when he is entirely satisfied that the defendant cannot then, or at any time before return day, be found in his district. Nor can I see any objection to the entry being made according to the truth of the [423]*423transaction, that is to say, that search had been made, at some time, and that the party could not be found. This being filed in the sheriff’s office, might operate as a more exciting notice to the bail, but the return of the ca. sa. and the return to the court of non est inventus on it, must not be confounded with such entry, made as convenient information to the sheriff and all the parties concerned. The return of the process, with the note of the sheriff’s actings under it, made at the time of such return, gives the right of action against the bail. This point of view is indicated by my brother O’Neall, in Saunders vs. Hughes, 2 Bail. 514, when he says — “ it might be more difficult, perhaps, to say whether an action against the bail could be commenced until after the term to which the ca. sa. was returnable.” This suggestion shews that the judge had his mind turned to the very question which we are now considering. In conformity with his course of reasoning, in the subsequent parts of his judgment he continued to say that — “ I incline to the opinion, that the plaintiff may ¡require the sheriff to execute and return the ca. sa. forthwith; and that upon the return of non est inventus being made, he may immediately proceed against the bail. But,” as he remarks, “this point not being necessary to the decision of this case, no judgment is intended to be pronounced upon it.” So that, at that time, the law was not settled ; jnor has the question since become the subject of distinct judicial decision.

This dictum, respectable from the authority of the learned judge who threw it out, is not countenanced in What had been said in previous decisions. I refer to the cases of Stevens & Meeds, 1 Con. Rep. (Mill) 318; Davitt vs. Counsel, 2 Nott & McC. 136; and Saunders vs. Bobo, 2 Bail. 492. In this second case, Judge Richardson, who seems to have had his mind fully possessed of the subject, remarks — “ the failure of the principal to ,pay or surrender, is vested by the executions issued. But to take them out, or either of them, for a moment only, would be a mockery. No actual search could be made. 1 apprehend, then, that the execution must have remained [424]*424with the sheriff throughout the vacation, i e,from the test to the return, before the bail becomes fixed.”

In the case of Saunders vs. Bobo, Judge Johnson seems to have taken it for granted that no return made by the sheriff, before the return day of the ca. sa. could fix the liability of bail. “ By the Act of 1799, the sheriff is required to make his return to the clerk of the court, fifteen days before the sitting of such court.” The judge goes on to say that “regularly the sheriff could not make his return until the day on which the ca. sa. was returnable; and if Grimke, (the principal in the bond under consideration) had surrendered himself in the interval between the sheriff’s return of the 3d of September, and the next term, the return would have been falsified,” This comes from a judge of great experience, and who must have had occasion to consider the subject as one of practical interest to the profession. I do not regard his remarks, here quoted, as mere dicta, but as essentially entering into the judgment delivered by the court. He did not regard the return made before the return day of the ca. sa. as the return required by law, so far as it regarded the time when it was made. It did not fix the bail de jure, nor could it do so, unless it was made on the return day of the ca. sa. For, until,that time, it was to remain in the hands of the sheriff, subject, if practicable, to be executed. This judgment, for judgment I must regard it, is entirely consistent with the practice in the courts of Westminster. I will venture the assertion, that no English case can be found in which a return of a ca. sa. has been made before the day mentioned in the writ, for the purpose of fixing bail. Indeed, it would seem to follow, from the directions of the writ itself, that the sheriff must keep it, unless actually executed, until the return day named in it. In England, there are certain fixed days, known as days “in bank,” upon some of which all original writs must be made returnable; they are called general returns of the term.

There are other days, called particular return days, on which all other writs, except onginals, or those founded upon them, may be returned. The first are regulated by [425]*425statute ; but the latter return days — such as may be termed particular return days, are specially named in the process itself. The nature of the process will indicate the difference between them. But in both instances, the return day is in term time. (Sec 1 Sellon’s Practice, 8, 9 and 10.)

For the purpose of fixing the bail, it is' indispensable that a ca. sa. should be sued out, and made returnable on some day.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Davitt v. Counsel
2 Nott & McC. 136 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1819)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.C.L. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ancrum-v-sloan-scctapp-1845.