Mabry v. . Turrentine

30 N.C. 201
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1847
StatusPublished

This text of 30 N.C. 201 (Mabry v. . Turrentine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mabry v. . Turrentine, 30 N.C. 201 (N.C. 1847).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

The coroner’s return was properly admitted. The Rev. Stat. Ch. 31, Sec. 126-7, requires sheriffs and coroners to serve all notices in any cause or proceeding, and enacts that their returns on the notices shall be evidence of the service. But the objection is, that Jones was not coroner, because he did not renew his bond, or the Court did not accept a new bond from him, and that, therefore, he was not capable of holding the office, according to the statute. Rev. St. Ch. 25, Seel 3. It is no part of the objection that Jones, who had been duly appointed and admitted into office originally, was not *205 acting as coroner, and so recognised generally by the public authorities and the community..

Therefore, those facts are to be assumed ; and, so assuming, it is clear, that the want of an official bond does not impair the validity of his acts, as defacto the coroner, in reference, at least, to third persons. Burke v. Elliott, 4 Ired. 355. Gilliam v. Reddick, 4 Ired 368.

In the case of Adams v. Turrentine, the Court has already decided at this term, that nothing can excuse the sheriff for the escape of a debtor, but the act of God, or of the enemies of the Country.

The remaining point is, whether Flemming was duly committed to the custody of the defendant, in execution on the plaintiff’s judgment. Objection is made, both to the authority of the Court to commit in this case, and also to the form of the commitment. The authority of the Court is questioned upon the strength of the provisions of the Act of 1777, Ch. 115, Sec. 22 — which provides, that, if a sheriff shall return upon a scire facias against bail, that the principal is imprisoned by virtue of any process civil or criminal, the Court, to which such scire facias, is returnable, shall, on motion of the plaintiff or bail, order that “such principal be retained where he shall be a prisoner until the plaintiff’s judgment and costs shall be paid, or be otherwise discharged by due course of law ; and that a copy of the order served on the keeper of such prison, before such prisoner’s releasement, shall be sufficient authority for him to retain such prisoner, until such order be complied with.” The Act further provides, that this shall be deemed a surrender of the principal, and a discharge of the bail. It is said, that this gives a special authority to commit under the particular circumstances of a scire facias against bail, and the return there on of the sheriff, of the imprisonment of the principal by him ; and that, as the sheriff did not so return on this sci. fa. and indeed could not, inasmuch as the imprisonment was in another County, the Superior Court of Davidson could *206 not, in the debtor’s and sheriff’s absence, commit in execution. But we think the nature of this enactment is entirely mistaken, and that the object was not to confer a jurisdiction or authority on the Court in a particular case, but to give a privilege, in that case, to the bail, rendered necessary by the situation of our Country, and by our judiciary system, and to make it imperative upon the Court to act on certain evidence to that end. It is an ancient common law jurisdiction to commit in execution, by order of record, such persons as are surrendered by their bail, or upon a judgment recovered against one already in prison. The regulations of the modes of proceeding are not prescribed positively by statutes, but exist as rules of practice adopted by the Courts, from tim.8 to time, for the convenience of the suitors, bail, and officers, to prevent surprise on the one hand, and oppression on the debtor, on the other hand. The subject is well treated, and the nature of the jurisdiction well explained in Tidd’sPr. 286, 364; and 2 Sellon’s Pr. 100 to 111, both as to the modes of committing, and to the super-sedeas. Now surrenders may even be made before a Judge at his chamber and he may order the committitur ; and for any irregularity the debtor has his supersedeas. It is unnecessary to comment particularly upon those passages, as they have no obligation here, and are only referred to, as shewing the nature of the jurisdiction and the practice under it. The committitur is, in substance, a capias ad satisfaciendum, and therefore within the power of the Court at common law to award, and is often indispensable, where the party cannot resort immediately to his ca. sa.; for example, when the principal is sur- . rendered during the term in which the judgment is taken. As the ca. sa.; does not go until the term ended, the commitment in execution is absolutely necessary to the security of the creditor. Now, in England, the course is to bring up a prisoner from another jail by habeas corpus, in order to his surrender and to charge him in execution ; *207 and it is generally highly proper in order to identify him to the Court and to the officer, and to justify the latter as to the person, if sued for detaining the wrong person, as well as for other reasons. But there is nothing in the nature of the thing to prevent the Court from making an order of commitment of a person, not present in Court; and. in many cases in this State, the power to make such an order is absolutely necessary to the convenience of parties and the advancement of justice. By the Act of 1777, bail have the right to surrender the principal; but it can be done only to the sheriff, who made the arrest, or in open Court. But, if the principal be in prison in another County, he cannot be surrendered to the sheriff who arrested him ; and, in many cases, it would be impossible, and, in most, highly inconvenient, to bring him to the Court in person.

For our Counties are so numerous and so distant, .from each other, and the terms of our Courts so short, that after process served on the bail and returned, the habeas corpus could not issue, and the party be brought in time to relieve the bail. True, the habeas corpus might be made returnable to a subsequent term; but that would be highly mischievous, as the sheriff cannot take bail after judgment, and would be compelled to retain the prisoner the whole time under all circumstances. Besides, the provision of the Aet extends to all cases, whether in the County, or the Superior Court. Therefore, in cases, in which a debtor is lawfully imprisoned in one County, and his bail is proceeded against in the Court of another County, it was a justice done to the bail, that he should be relieved upon shewing those facts, without being required to make an actual surrender in Court. It was the purpose of the Legislature to require such relief for the bail from the Courts, and also to make the return of the sheriff on the scire facias against the bail sufficient evidence.

*208 But, certainly, it was not intended to make that the only evidence, nor to say that, in the case of such a return only, should the Court order the commitlitur,

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30 N.C. 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mabry-v-turrentine-nc-1847.