Howard v. Blackford

3 N.J.L. 777
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 15, 1811
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.J.L. 777 (Howard v. Blackford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Blackford, 3 N.J.L. 777 (N.J. 1811).

Opinion

Kirkpatrick, C. J.

This is an action of debt upon a bond given to the sheriff of the county of Essex, for the bounds and rules of the prison. To the plaintiffs’ declaration, the defendants have pleaded sundry pleas; and to the first, fourth, and fifth of these, the plaintiffs have demurred; and the question is upon the demurrers.

The first plea, viz. nil debet is abandoned on the argument by the defendants themselves. And rightly. [*] Nil debet to a bond, on general demurrer, is bad. 2 Wilson 10, 2 L. Haym. 1500.

The fifth plea, that the act under which this bond is taken, directs that it be taken in double the sum for which the defendant is committed; and that in this case the bond exceeds that sum. This plea cannot be maintained. Likening it to the common case of a bail bond, (and I can see no difference in the principle) the cases of Nordon vs. Horsly 2 Wilson 69, and Wishard v. Wilden, 1 Bur. 330, are conclusive. In laying down the law in the latter of these cases, Ld Mansfield says, “the sheriff, or perhaps the plaintiff) may be answerable or punishable; but the bond is not void; the statute is directory only.”

The fourth plea deserves more consideration. It presents a new case, and the law must be settled. The defendants [572]*572pleaded, in substance, in this plea, that walking within the bounds and rules of the prison, and near the line thereof, (which was designated by no visible marks or objects) the prisoner, casually, acccidentally, and by mistake, walked over tbe same, to the distance of five feet and no more, and then immediately, of his own free will and accord, and without any fresh pursuit or re-caption, returned into the custody of the sheriff, within the said bounds and rules, and there continued until discharged by due course of law; and that this is the walking out and escape, of which the plaintiffs complain, &c.

Prison bounds and prison yards, have at all times existed. They have generally, but I believe not always, been surrounded with walls, to prevent escapes. The provision made by the act in question, only extends these bounds; and instead of walls for the safe keeping, requires of the prisoner, what is much more suitable to the condition of a free man, a bond, with sureties, that he will heep himself within them. The bonds, therefore, so far as it relates to escapes, are to be considered as the walls of the prison. AYhat [*]• was an escape before, from the ancient limited bounds, is an escape now from the new enlarged bounds, and nothing else. The doctrine of escape is no way altered. The plaintiff’s remedy against the sheriff and the sheriff’s defence against the plaintiff, are the same now as before the passing of the act. The condition of things is in no way changed, except that the sheriff, for his security, instead of the walls of the prison, has the defendant’s bond with sureties, taken upon his own judgment, and at his own risk.

Let us see how this is. By the law, as it stood before the passing of this act, that is, by the common law, if a defendant in custody on mesne process made an escape, the plaintiff had his action on the case against the sheriff, for his damages, and the sheriff again had his action on the case against the defendant, to recover over his action. It was not necessary that there should have been an actual recovery against the sheriff, to entitle him to his action against the defendant. His action was grounded upon his liability, and therefore, he might pursue it as well before, as after a recovery against himself. To this purpose is Cro. Eliz. 53, 234, 349.

The sheriff’s action therefore, against the defendant, being grounded entirely upon his own liability to the plaintiff, it is manifest, that whatever took away that liability, took away also his right of action; and of course, that whatever was a good plea in the mouth of the sheriff against the plaintiff in his action of escape, was a good. plea also in the [573]*573mouth of the defendant against the sheriff, in his action. Now, as the sheriff might plead to the plaintiff’s action, a rescue, a re-caption or fresh pursuit, or the voluntary return of the defendant into custody before action brought; so the defendant might also plead the same pleas to the sheriff’s action against him. And in both cases, they are a complete bar. Cro. Eliz. 873, 2 Sh. 908, Com. Rep. 554.

[*] This I think, was incontestably the case at the common law. Has this act altered it?

The act is made for the benefit and casement of prisoners. It is to be construed liberally in their favor.

Upon the enlargement of the prison bounds to an extent which could not be surrounded by walls, it would have been absurd, as well as unjust, to make the sheriff liable, upon the old principles, for escapes which he had no means of preventing. Eor Ids security, therefore, instead of bars and bolts, and locks, the law gives 1dm a bond, of the sufficiency of which, he is to be the sole judge. Hut this bond creates no new obligation, it imposes no new7 duty upon the defendant. He was as much bound before, by the law of the land, to keep himself within the prison, as he is now by the bond. The sheriff’s action against him before, was as legitimate as it is now, and the same damages were recoverable, and upon the same principle. Eut there, instead of an action on the case, against a man who has broken prison, and perhaps lied his country, lie has a bond with sureties, not to recover any thing more or different from what by law he could have recovered before, but to make that recovery secure. On the most obvious reasoning, therefore, wliatev. er was a good defence then, is a good defence now. If, in in this case, the plaintiffs, instead of taking an assignment of this bond, had brought their action of escape against the sheriff, as they might well have done, and the sheriff had pleaded thereto the matters set forth in this plea, and had had judgment for himself, as of course he must, can it be imagined that he still could support an action on the bond, against the defendant? It would be contrary to all principle. The sheriff in that case, would have been in no wise damnified, he would have been subject to no liability. Shall the plaintiffs then be put into a better situation, and the defendants into a [*] worse, by the assignment of the bond? Can the sheriff by a mere transfer, raise up a right of action which he never had himself? which never existed before? Or can he by that means, wrest from the defendants their legitimate plea? Certainly not. It is manifest that the act gave the assignment merely to save the circuity of action, and not to alter the substantial rights of the parties.

[574]*574The money which the plaintiffs had a right to recover against the sheriff, the sheriff had aright to recover against the defendants, and no more. Can this right be enlarged to the plaintiffs against the defendants, by the assignment of the bond? It cannot.

It has been insisted that the words of the act are express and positive, thati/' the prisoner walk out of the said bounds the bond shall be forfeited. They are so. But then, like all other words, they must have a construction according to the intent of the Legislature, and suitable to the subject matter under consideration.

The question then will be, what is walking out of the

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

Related

Dole v. Moulton
2 Johns. Cas. 205 (New York Supreme Court, 1801)
Le Gierse & Co. v. Pierce
2 Wilson 69 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 N.J.L. 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-blackford-nj-1811.