People ex rel. Crouse v. Cowles

4 Keyes 38
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 4 Keyes 38 (People ex rel. Crouse v. Cowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Crouse v. Cowles, 4 Keyes 38 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinions

Woodruff, J.

The distinction between a commitment upon a precept issued for the disobedience of an order for the payment of a sum of money and a commitment upon a' conviction of misconduct, punishable by fine and imprisonment, is very clearly indicated in the statute, and has [46]*46been repeatedly declared by the courts (2 R. S. pp. 534, 535, 536, 537)

The proceedings are unlike, and the decision and penalties imposed are different.

A precept to commit (§ 4), for the non-payment of money, in obedience to a rule or order, issues of course, and ex parte, on proof by affidavit that personal demand has been made, and that the money is not paid. Eo proof that the party has money wherewith to pay, is necessary. The order for such payment being made, and presumptively made on sufficient grounds, it is not open to examination upon its merits to raise an excuse for disobedience; insolvency will not prevent the issuing of the precept, nor entitle the party committed to its revocation. Under the act of 1843, the party showing inability has, after commitment, an appeal to the discretion of the court, but in the first instance, whether there be actual contumacy or not, whether the party be able to pay or not, if a case has been presented in which the court had jurisdiction to make the order for the payment, the precept and the commitment follow if the money is not paid, whatever excuse the party may have for .disobedience (2 E. S. 535, § 4.)

E'er is there any adjudication or conviction of misconduct, nor any thing in the nature of punishment imposed. The defaulting party is and can be subjected to no infliction punitory in its nature.

By whatever technical name such a precept be called, and whether the consequences in respect to the right to the liberties of the jail are or are not the same, the nature and the object of such a precept and of a capias ad satisfaciendum are identical, and the period of commitment and mode of satisfying their requirements in order to a release, are also identical.

A commitment of the other description is preceded (§ 5 et seg.) by a judicial inquiry into the question of the guilt or innocence of the party charged, in which he has an opportunity to appear and answer, and be heard in his defense; and the conviction is followed by punishment, punishment in form and in fact, the judgment pronounced is fine or im[47]*47prisonment, or both, as the nature of the case may require, and where the misconduct whereof the party was convicted has produced injury to a party, such fine shall be at least sufficient to indemnify him. But though no such injury appears, the court may nevertheless impose a fine and imprisonment for the public wrong which has been done.

All this is a provision for the infliction of punishment for an offense, an offense tending to impair the efficiency of our courts in the administration of justice, to bring them into disrespect, and it may in some of the cases embraced within the statutes, be incidentally injurious to parties.

The statute itself calls it “ punishment,” by providing that where the offense be also indictable, and on indictment the offender is convicted, “the punishment already inflicted” shall be taken into consideration “ in forming the sentence” of the court.

The process in the former case is strictly and purely remedial. In the latter it is punitive, and in most instances purely so.

By 2 Revised Statutes, 755, sections 7 and 8, persons duly sentenced to imprisonment upon conviction for any contempt or misconduct, cannot be let out of prison on bail, or otherwise, by the keeper of the prison, without lawful authority, but are to be kept in rooms separate and distinct from convicts under sentence.

In declaring who shall be entitled to the liberties of the jail, the statute designates every person who shall be iñ custody of the sheriff of any county by virtue

1. Of a capias ad respondendum / or,

2. Of an execution in a civil action; or,

3. By virtue of any attachment for the non-payment of costs in a civil action; or,

4. In consequence of a surrender in exoneration of his bail.

Whether a party committed by precept for the non-payment of money other than costs, is entitled to such liberties, depends upon the true construction of this statute, or, in other words, whether the precept in the present case was an execution in a civil action.

[48]*48. That a commitment upon a conviction and sentence to fine and imprisonment is not' such an execution, is on all hands conceded.

1. The object of the precept and an ordinary ca. sa. are identical.

2. The form of the precept and a capias ad satisfaciendum out of chancery, are in every material respect, identical.

3. The prisoner is, in the terms of both,- only held until he pays the money mentioned.

4. Judged by its ofiice and purpose, and by its sole legal effect and operation, it is an execution against the body.

5. The use of the term “ execution” does not necessarily import any precise form of process, and properly includes all processes which are the same in their purpose, office arid effect.

In my judgment, the precept in the present case is within the designation in this statute, and upon. that the whole question whether the person committed was entitled to the liberties of the jail, depends.

On first examination of this statute, I was much impressed by a thought suggested' by the special provision therein for admitting to the liberties a person in custody by virtue of any attachment for the non-payment of costs in a civil action (subd. 3:)

The authority to commit for the non-payment of costs, is part of the same section which authorizes the precept to commit for the non-payment of a sum of money ordered to be paid, and it should apparently be treated as involving precisely the same legal consequences, and no other.

If then by force of the admission to the liberties of a person “held in custody by virtue of an execution in a civil action” (subd. 2), the party committed by precept in such case is entitled to the liberties of the jail, why was the third subdivision added—the case was already provided for—and if the legislature intended that a person committed by such a precept for the non-payment of money, why did they confine the third subdivision to the non-payment of costs ?

Whether the commitment “by virtue of an attachment for the non-payment of costs,” means to describe another [49]*49case than a commitment under the section we are considering, by precept, which is' the process specifically described, may or may- not be doubtful. But it was at one time questioned whether a person committed by virtue of an attachment for contempt, in not paying costs, was a person held in custody on civil process, within our early statutes, by which jail liberties were established.

It had been decided that such a commitment was civil process within those acts. (Jackson v. Billings, 1 Caines, N. Y. 252.) The phraseology of the statute was changed in the Revised Statutes, and the language above quoted was employed in the other subdivisions, and to prevent doubt, the' case of an attachment for non-payment of costs was expressly provided for.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Keyes 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-crouse-v-cowles-ny-1868.