Fuller v. Davis
This text of 67 Mass. 612 (Fuller v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The rights and liabilities of sureties on bonds for the prison limits are so like those of bail, that we think the law, which is applicable to bail, must be applied in this case. [613]*613As to bail, “ wherever the principal, by act of God, or of the law, is taken, as it were, out of the bail’s keeping, before the day of surrender allowed, and without fault in his bail, they are discharged.” 5 Dane Ab. 290. And it was decided, in Way v. Wright, 5 Met. 380, where the principal, after giving bad, was convicted of a crime, and sentenced to the state prison, that his bail were entitled to be discharged, on motion. The principle applied in that case is the same which we apply in this ; namely, that as the power of surrendering the principal was taken away by an act of the law, the obligation to surrender him was thereupon discharged by the law.
The Rev. Sts. c. 48, § 6, confer power on judges of probate, except in the county of Suffolk, to commit to the State Lunatic Hospital in Worcester any lunatic, who in their opinion is so furiously mad as to render it manifestly dangerous to the peace and safety of the community that he should be at large. By virtue of the power thus conferred, and before any breach of the condition of the bond now in suit, the judge of probate for this county committed the principal obligor to the hospital, where he remained about twelve months. Now whatever may be the law of other states or countries, as to the rights and obligations of bail for insane persons, (2 Wash. C. C. 464, and Shelford on Lunatics, 407,408,) or however the law as to their bail, or as to their sureties on bonds for the prison limits, may have been in this commonwealth, before provision was made,-by statute, for the commitment of such persons, by legal process, to the custody of officers of public institutions established for their benefit, we have no doubt that, since such provision has been made, neither their bail nor sureties can take them from such custody, and surrender them to the county jailer, to be imprisoned as debtors. We are therefore of opinion that the court of common pleas rightly refused to issue a writ of habeas corpus, on the petition of this surety, to bring the principal from the hospital to be surrendered to the jailer; and that, as the surety could not, by law, surrender the principal, he cannot by law be held answerable for not surrendering him. Judgment for the defendant.
Thomas, J. did not sit in this case.
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