Ex parte Graham

234 S.W. 176, 150 Ark. 236, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 346
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 24, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 176 (Ex parte Graham) 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
Ex parte Graham, 234 S.W. 176, 150 Ark. 236, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 346 (Ark. 1921).

Opinions

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellant brings up for review, by writ of certiorari, the record in proceedings before the chancellor where bail was sought. The prayer of the petition below was denied on the face of the record without the introduction of testimony. So we must test the correctness of the chancellor’s ruling by the facts appearing upon the face of the record.

Petitioner was arrested in Nevada County on. a charge of felony, and was carried before a justice of the peace, who held an examining trial on August. 19, 1921, and committed petitioner to await the action of the grand jury at the next regular term of the Nevada Circuit Court, to be held in January, 1922.

The magistrate fixed bail in the sum of $2,000, which was given before that officer, and petitioner was released from custody. Subsequently the sureties on the bail bond surrendered petitioner to the sheriff of the county, who took him into .custody and still holds him in the county jail. The surrender was made without delivering to the sheriff a certified copy of the bail bond, but it is recited in the response of the sheriff in the present proceedings that the bond had been lost by the committing magistrate. Nothing else appears in the record in regard to the failure to furnish a copy of the bond.

On September 16, 1921, there appeared before the committing magistrate, according to the record of that officer now before us, the attorney for petitioner and the deputy prosecuting attorney of the county, and an order was entered reducing petitioner’s bail to the sum of $1,500, reciting that this reduction was agreed upon between the two attorneys. It is also recited in the order that a bail bond was then presented to the committing magistrate and approved. The sheriff, according to his response in this case, declined to approve the bond on the ground that the sureties were insolvent and petitioner is still in jail.

The first contention of counsel is that the surrender of custody of petitioner to the sheriff was not made in accordance with the statute in that a certified copy of the bond was not furnished, and that for that reason the surrender was illegal, and the first bond is still in force, which entitles petitioner to be discharged from custody. The statute provides that “the bail may surrender the defendant, or the defendant may surrender himself, to the jailer -of the county in which the offense was committed; but the surrender must be accompanied by a certified copy of the bail-bond to be delivered to the jailer.” Crawford & Moses’ Digest,3 2961. The two succeeding sections provide that “the bail may obtain from the officer having in his custody the. bail-bond or recognizance a certified copy thereof, and thereupon, at .any place in the State, arrest the defendant,” or that “the bail may arrest the defendant without such certified copy.” The recital of the sheriff’s response is that the bail-bond was lost, bnt this did not deprive the sureties of the right to surrender the accused into the custody of the sheriff. According to the express language of the statute, the sureties had the right to make the arrest without a copy of the bail-bond and surrender the accused to the sheriff, and the furnishing of bond was only for the protection of that officer. Only substantial compliance with the statute is required, and the actual surrender of the person of the accused to the proper officer, and the acceptance by that officer, even without a delivery of a copy of the bond, constitutes substantial compliance with the statute, so as to effectuate the release of the sureties from further liability. Sternberg v. State, 42 Ark. 127; Hester v. State, 145 Ark. 347. This disposes of the petitioner’s claim to the right to be discharged under the first bond.

It is next contended, that the committing magistrate was the proper officer to approve the second bond, and that petitioner should be discharged under that bond, notwithstanding the refusal of the sheriff to approve the bond. There is no question raised about the validity of the order of the committing magistrate reducing the amount of the bail subsequent to his original order fixing the amount. The order reducing the bail was made upon agreement between the deputy prosecuting attorney and counsel for the accused, and the refusal of the sheriff to approve the bond was not based on the reduction of the amount. The real controversy on this feature of the case relates to the question which of the officers was authorized, under the statute, to approve the bond tendered after the accused was taken into custody when surrendered to the sheriff on his former bail bond. The ground of thé--sheriff’s refusal was, ns before áfrated, that'the sureties were insolvent, and there-is no'attempt in the present proceedings to show ihat the sheriff’s refusal was arbitrary, or without justification, if he was authorized by statute to approve or disapprove the bond.

Section 2937 of’ Crawford & Moses’ Digest, which was section 60 of the Criminal Code, reads as follows:

“If the defendant is committed to jail, the magistrate shall make ont a written order of commitment, signed by him, which shall be delivered to the jailer by the peace officer who executed the order of commitment. If the offense is bailable, the magistrate must fix the sum for which bail is to be given, and, if sufficient bail is offered, take the same and discharge the defendant. If, however, sufficient bail is not offered,' the sum in which bail is required must be stated in the order of commitment.”

It is clear from this section that a bond offered at the time of the commitment is to be approved by the committing magistrate, but that, if bail is not offered at that time, the amount thereof shall be fixed and stated in the order of commitment. Section 61 of the Criminal Code reads as follows:

“The defendant, after commitment, and before the commencement of the next term of the court having jurisdiction to try the offense, may be admitted to-bail in the sum fixed by the committing magistrate, by such magistrate, or by the judge of the probate court; but, after 'the commencement of the term of the court, he can only be admitted to bail by the court or the judge thereof. ’ ’

Mr. Gantt in digesting this section, of the Code erroneously substituted the words, “or the circuit court, or the judge thereof, in vacation,” in the place of the words, “or by the judge of the probate court.” Gantt’s Digest of 1874, § 1715. This error has been brought forward in all of the later digests. Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 2938. Doubtless the error occurred inadvertently by reason of the fact that when trie Digest of 1874 was compiled probate jurisdiction had been transferred to the circuit court, and in all instances where the statute referred to the probate court the digester changed it to.read “circuit court.” The change was made in the section now under consideration upon the theory that the change in probate jurisdiction called for a change in the wording of this section. The change, however, was inappropriate from the fact that the authority conferred by this section on the judge of the probate court to approve bail was a ministerial and not a judicial act, and if it had been judicial it could not, under the Constitution, have been conferred upon the probate court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 176, 150 Ark. 236, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-graham-ark-1921.