Anglea v. Commonwealth

10 Va. 696
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 18, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Va. 696 (Anglea v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anglea v. Commonwealth, 10 Va. 696 (Va. 1853).

Opinion

Lee, J.

On the 26th of June 1851 the plaintiff in error Anglea was convicted in the Circuit court of Lynchburg of murder in the second degree, and the term of his imprisonment in the penitentiary was ascertained by the jury to be five yearn; and on the 28th of June 1851 sentence was passed upon him by the court accordingly. On the 81st of December 1851 a pardon was granted him by the then executive of the commonwealth, in which it was declared that the governor had thought proper “to pardon the said Joseph Anglea for the crime and conviction aforesaid, hereby releasing him from all pains, penalties or forfeitures that might or would have been inflicted on him had these letters of pardon not been made.” Previously to the emanation of this pardon, however, the clerk had taxed the expenses of prosecution, and-had issued an execution for the same as the law [697]*697directed. This execution was dated on the 21st of July 1851, and was returned by the sergeant of Lynchburg, “ No effects.” On the 11th of February 1852, after the pardon had been granted, another execution issued and was placed in the hands of the sergeant for collection. In his taxation of the expenses recoverable by the commonwealth, the clerk had included certain fees which he supposed were due to himself, to the clerk of the Hustings court, to the sergeant and to the attorney for the commonwealth in both the Hustings court and the Circuit court, amounting in the whole to the sum of thirty dollars and forty-five cents; and he made an endorsement to that effect upon the execution, specifying the amount due to each. The sheriff to whom this last execution was directed, levied the same upon property of the said Anglea; and he thereupon gave a delivery bond with the other plaintiff in error, "William Ferguson, as his security. In computing the amount for which this bond should be taken it appears that the sheriff by mistake added the sum endorsed on the execution as payable to the different officers, to the amount of the execution, and took the bond for the whole, including also a commission on the said sum of thirty dollars and forty-five cents. The bond having been forfeited, a motion was made in the Circuit court of Lynchburg for award of execution thereon. The defendant appeared to contest said motion, and moved the court to quash the execution and bond upon the ground that the former had been illegally and irregularly issued, and the latter improperly exacted. The court, however, overruled the motion to quash, and awarded execution for the sum of four hundred and fifty-three dollars and thirty-seven cents, (the whole amount named in the bond,) with interest thereon from the 24th of February 1852 till paid and costs. The defendants [698]*698thereupon excepted to the opinion of the court, setting &rth the facts before stated by way of an agreed case: And it also appeared from the exception, that the attorney for the commonwealth in the Circuit court had released so much of the delivery bond as ^ embraced the said sum of thirty dollars and forty-five cents, and the commission charged thereon. To this judgment a supersedeas has been awarded from this court.

It is laid down in 7 Bac. Ab. (Phila. ed. of 1846,) p. 416, title “Pardon,” letter H, that a pardon whether by the king or act of parliament removes not only the punishment but all the legal disabilities consequent on the crime. And in 2 Russ, on Crimes 975, the doctrine is stated in nearly the same terms. But it is manifest that it could not be intended to convey the idea that a pardon was equivalent in effect to a reversal of the judgment of conviction, and removed all the consequences of the crime and the conviction; becanse we know that in a variety of instances the effects of the conviction remain notwithstanding the pardon. Thus a pardon will not cure the corruption of blood under the English law caused by an attainder of treason or felony; nor will it relieve a forfeiture either of lands or goods arising upon such' attainder. 2 Hawk. P. C. 549, sect. 54, 57; 7 Bac. Ab. 418. So if a man have been attainted of felony and afterwards pardoned, yet he shall not be sworn of an inquest, for that he is not probus et legalis homo. Brown v. Crashaw, Bulst. part 2, p. 154. Lord Hale says a pardon does not always make the man honest, and therefore he shall not be a juryman. 2 Hale’s P. C. 278. So in New York, where persons adjudged to imprisonment fo],* life in the state ’son are declared “ to be civilly dead to all inte’ purposes in law”’ a pardon to a man so senh /not annul or affect a subsequent marriage 4 nor the sale of his property by [699]*699persons appointed to administer on Ms estate, nor divest Ms heirs of the interest acquired in his estate in consequence of such his civil death. In the matter of Doming and his children, 10 John. R. 232. So it does not restore the competency of the offender convicted of perjury; and although in case of a conviction for felony, the competency is restored, yet it is said the crime still goes to the credibility of the witness. 1 Phil. Ev. 35; 2 Stark. Ev. 721. And a pardon will never release an interest that may be acquired by a private individual in a share of the penalty incurred. United States v. Lancaster, 4 Wash. C. C. R. 64; Rowe v. The State, 2 Bay’s R. 565. Nor will it remit costs to which parties may be entitled. Ex parte McDonald, 2 Whart. R. 440. So in Massachusetts, a discharge from a former sentence in consequence of a pardon, will not protect the party against the additional punishment for a subsequent offence under the statute imposing additional punishment on convicts who had been discharged from former sentences in due course of law. Evans v. The Commonwealth, 3 Metc. R. 453. And in Virginia it has been decided that a justice of the peace who is convicted of felony, forfeits Ms office, and is incapacitated from acting under his commission ; and a pardon will neither avoid the forfeiture nor restore his capacity. Commonwealth v. Fugate, 2 Leigh 724. Other instances might be cited showing that a pardon of the offence is by no means equivalent in its effects to the reversal of the judgment.

In 1 Chit. C. L. 775, (New York ed. 1847) it is said that the effect of a pardon is to prevent the infliction of the puMshment denounced, and also to give to the defendant a new capacity, credit and character. And Judge Blackstone says its effect is to make the offender a new man, to acquit him of all corporal penalties and forfeitures, and not so much to restore his former as to give him a new credit and capacity. 4 Bl. Com. [700]*700402. This I think gives a more correct idea of the operation and effect of a pardon than the language used in Bacon and Russell. For in fact though it relieves the party of all penalties directly annexed to the offence, yet it does very little towards removing the other consequences of the crime.

In regard to the construction of the terms of a pardon, we find it laid down as a settled rule, that no pardon of felony shall be carried beyond its express purport. 7 Bac. Ab. 411; 2 Hawk. P. C. 535, § 12. And that a pardon at the suit of the party is to be taken more strongly against' him, but where granted mero motu, more strongly against the grantor. 17 Vin. Ab. title Prerogative, p. 19, 20, 27, 31, 36.

If the pardon in this case be tried by these rules, it cannot be made to extend to the remission of the costs of the prosecution.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Va. 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anglea-v-commonwealth-va-1853.