Cannon v. State

17 Ark. 365
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ark. 365 (Cannon v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannon v. State, 17 Ark. 365 (Ark. 1856).

Opinion

Mr. Justice IIanly

delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.

Tbis was a proceeding by seire facias, determined in tbe Teli Circuit Court, at tbe- September term, 1855. A scire facias issued from that court,, on tbe 2d day of May, 1855, reciting that,. “Whereas* Richard IL Lewellen, as principal, and John W. Cannon, James M. .Bass, John C. Barrett- and James E. Millard,, as his sureties, on the- 6th day of April, 1854, before John.' C. Herring, sheriff in and for the county of Yell, and State-©f Arkansas, acknowledged themselves to owe and be indebted to tbe State of Arkansas, in the full and just sum of three hundred dollars: that is to say, the said Richard II., in the sum of $300, and the said John W., J. M., J. O. and J. E., in the like sum,, to be levied of-their respective goods and chattels, lands and tenements : to be void upon condition, that the above bounden Richard H, should well and truly make his personal appearance before the Judge of our Circuit Court of Yell county, on the first day of our then next September term, at a court to be holden at the court house, in the town of Danville, on the 4th Monday of September,, then next, then and there to answer the said State of Arkansas, of an indictment preferred against him, for obtaining property under false pretences, and that he should not depart therefrom, without leave of said court; and, whereas, on the said 4th Monday of September, 1854, the said Richard II., wholly failed to kee¡3 the- condition of said recognizance, in this: that, although called, he failed to appear and answer the charges, and not thereafter depart said court without leave thereof, whereby the condition of said recognizance became, and was forfeited, as appears of record, in said court,” with the usual summons appended. This writ of sci. fa. was regularly directed to the sheriff of Yell county, and was duly executed by him, on all the parties named therein, except the said Richard II., the principal recognizor. At the return term, it appears from the transcript, that a nolle jproseqm was entered by the attorney for the State, as to the party not served, Richard II. Two of the defendants,, Bass and Barrett, moved to quash the sei. fa. on the ground of a misjoinder of parties, which was overruled, and the other defendants pleaded: Millard, a plea of former recovery: Cannon, nul tiel record, nul tiel recognizance, and nul tiel forfeiture. Replication to the plea of Millard, averring that the former recovery was not upon an issue to the merits, and averring, that the court, in such judgment, awarded an alias soi. fa. against the party on the recognizance on which this proceeding is had. To this replication, the defendant, Millard, demurred, and joinder therein by the State. The State took issue upon the three pleas of Cannon. The demurrer to the State’s replication to Millard’s plea overruled, and exceptions. The issues upon the pleas of Cannon were tried by the court, and a finding thereon for the State.

On the trial of the issues formed on Cannon’s pleas, the State produced and read, against the objection of the defendant, a. bond in these words:

“We, Richard IT. Lewellen, as principal, and John W. Cannon, J. M. Bass, J. C. Barrett, and James E. Millard, as securities, acknowledge ourselves to owe and be indebted to the State of Arkansas, in the full and just sum of three hundred dollars: that is to say, the said Richard IT., in the sum of three hundred dollars, and the said John W., J. M., J. C. and J. E., in the like sum, to be levied of our goods and chattels, lands and tenements. To be void,” &c. Conditioned, as the law requires, and in the manner recited in the sei. fan as above, which purports to be signed and sealed by the parties, with this endorsement at the bottom thereof, to wit: “Approve of the above securities,” signed by the sheriff of Tell, in his official capacity.

The State furthermore read, against the objection of the defendant, the following entry from the record of the Tell Circuit Court, purporting to have heen entered at the September term, 185é, to wit: “ Comes the State by her attorney, and the defendant, Richard H., being' solemnly called, comes not, but makes default, and the sureties (who are named as above,) also being called, but likewise make default. It is, therefore, considered by the court here, that the said recognizance bond be, and the same is, hereby forfeited, and the State recover,” &c. To the reading of which bond, and entry as above, the defendant excepted, and set them out in his bill.

Judgment final was rendered by the court, upon the finding and ruling of the court, as above, for the State, and against the defendants, for the sum of $300.

The cause was brought to, and is now pending in this court on appeal.

Several points are relied and insisted on by the appellants, for the reversal of the judgment of the court below, to wit:

1st. The finding of the court is not sustained by the proof.

2d. The court erred in permitting, the bail bond and forfeiture to be read as evidence.

3d. The court erred in overruling the demurrer of Millard to the replication of the State, to his plea of former recovery.

éth. That the court erred in refusing to sustain the motion to quash the sci. fa.

"We will proceed to consider and dispose of the points relied on, in the order in which they occur.

1. The only evidence before the court upon the issues to Cannon’s pleas of nul tiel record, nul tiel recognizance and nul tiel forfeiture, were the recognizance bond, and the entry upon the record of the forfeiture of such recognizance. The question is, does that evidence sustain those issues? It is insisted, on the part of the appellants, that there is a variance between the recognizance recited in the sci. fa., and the one produced in proof, in this: that in the said sci. fa., the parties, both principal and sureties, are charged to be jointly bound in the penal sum of $300: whereas, the recognizance itself shows that the principal, Lewellen, is bound in the sum of $300, an,d the securities in the like sum. We have examined this objection, together with the various authorities to which we have been referred, and cannot discover the potency of the objection, or the application of the authorities to the particular case before us. We think the sci. fa. follows, substantially, the recognizance. We, therefore hold, that the proof was sufficient to authorize the finding, if the sci. fa. and recognizance were in due form; and the officer, who took the latter, had the authority under the law to do so.

2. The determination of the first error assigned disposes, virtually, of the second. "We will, therefore, not notice this assignment further.

3. It is insisted, that the replication of the State, to the plea of Millard, is defective, for the reason that it does not contain matter of estoppel, nor does it traverse, or confess and avoid the matters set up in the plea, and we are referred to 1 Chitty's Plead. 648, 650, and 659, in support of this position. There can be no doubt, but that it is a rule of pleading, that the replication must either, first, present matter of estoppel to the plea, or secondly, must traverse, or thirdly, confess and avoid the matter pleaded by the defendant. See 1 Ghit. PI. 648. And, it seems, from the brief of the attorney for the State, in this instance, that this is not controverted.

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3 Ark. 313 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1841)
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Bluebook (online)
17 Ark. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-state-ark-1856.