Saunders v. Hughes

18 S.C.L. 504
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 18 S.C.L. 504 (Saunders v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. Hughes, 18 S.C.L. 504 (S.C. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinions

O’Neall, J.

The various objections which have been take* for the defendant, against the plaintiff’s recovery, may be arranged into-three general classes : 1st. To the affidavit. 2nd. To the bail bond. 3rd. To- the-length of time which the capias ad satisfaciendum remained in the sheriff’s office, and to the time at which it was returned.

1st. The office of the affidavit in bail process is to furnish reasonable proof of the nature and justice of the debt. This is required for two purposes: first, to enable the Court to see that the plaintiff has a good and legal cause of action, for a sum certain, before a citizen is by legal process deprived of his liberty ; and secondly, so to inform the defendant of the claim made against him, as to enable him to admit its justice by paying it,, or contest it by giving bail, and defending the action.

If the defendant acquiesces and gives bail, we should be apt to conclude, arguing from general principles, that this was a waiver of all objections to the regularity of the affidavit; for the defendant’s own act admits its sufficiency to require bail. But this is not a consequence resulting from the execution of the bail bond : for until the term to which the writ is returnable, the defendant has not, generally, the opportunity of questioning the regularity of the affidavit. After the return term, I incline [507]*507to the opinion, that he would be precluded from moving to set 'aside the order for bail: hut after plea and judgment, he could not, surely, be allowed to object to the affidavit for any irregularity. After judgment, the Court has the highest and best evidence, known to the law, of the legality, justice, and amount of the debt; and through all the various stages of the case, from the writ to final judgment, the defendant has had all the opportunities, which he could desire, of ascertaining both the nature, and the amount of the debt.

Objections, upon which, as a matter of legal right, a motion is made to set aside the order for bail on account of the irregularly of the affidavit, can, generally, be taken advantage of by the defendant alone. It is to guard his liberty against illegal violation, that so much strictness in framing the affidavit is required. If he chooses to submit to the arrest, and to remain in the custody of the law, his bail cannot surely complain, that the affidavit is not technically regular. In contemplation of law, the defendant is in the custody of his bail; and they arc held to be liable for the debt and damages of the plaintiff, because th“y fail to produce his body to answer the judgment. They are his voluntary keepers; and can certainly raise no objection to the process under which he was arrested, which the-sheriff, if he had escaped from his custody, could not raise. The sheriff, it is clear, could not object to the regularity of the process, or affidavit to hold to bail ; although he might shew that either was void. Harvey v. Huggins, decided at Charleston, in March, 1831. (supra, 252.) To the same, but to no greater extent, can the bail defend themselves by plea, in an action against them on the. bail bond.

The irregularities complained of in the affidavit, in this case, are all of form and not of substance; and they were cured by the subsequent proceedings, so that they cannot now be set up as a legal defence. The affidavit states, that “ Col. Joseph Hughes, of the firm of Joseph and William Hughes, stands justly indebted to this deponent in the sum of nine hundred and thirty-six dollars and sixty-one cents, due on a note, besides interest, and that no part thereof has been paid, to the best of his knowledge.” Now whether this affidavit is, or is not, sufficient to compel the defendant, Col. Joseph Hughes, to give bail, it is hot necessary now to inquire. It is said to be uncertain in [508]*508two respects 5 first, that it docs not fix the time from which the accrued : and secondly, in stating that no part of the debt has been paid to the best of his knowledge. Each of these objections might have had some plausibility at the issuing of the writ: but after the rendition of the judgmient, the interest is ascertained, and the debt is fixed to be due. Can the bail make an objection, by plea, which their principal was satisfied not to make, and which he would not now be permitted to raise ? I should as soon permit the sheriff to make the objection, if he now had the defendant in his custody, under a surrender from his bail, as to permit the bail to make it.

Another objection urged, is that the cause of action set out in the affidavit is a note, and that recovered on, is “a single bond.” Without stopping to inquire whether the term “note,” may not mean a note under seal, or single bond, as well as a promissory note, or note of hand ; I shall only remark, that the undertaking of the bail was, that .the defendant should appear and answer to the plaintiff, in the very form of action in which he has recovered. If the affidavit had set out a cause of action not embraced by the writ, it was for the defendant to. object to his arrest and detention ; if he concedes it to be the same, and submits to the inconvenience of remaining in the custody of his bail, the objection, as a matter of right, or plea, cannot be raised by his keeper for him.

In 1 Tidd’s Practice, 165, the rule is stated tobe, “If there be no affidavit, or if the affidavit be defective, or not duly filed, or if the sum sworn to be not indorsed on the writ, the Court will discharge the defendant on common bail. But if the affidavit be merely informal, the defendant cannot object to it after he has voluntarily given a bail bond, put in or perfected bail above, taken the declaration out of the office, pleaded to the action, or let judgment go by default.” The first branch of this rule, it is seen, applies exclusively to the privilege conceded to the defendant, of being discharged on common bail, on his own motion; aud it may be well questioned, whether the bail would be intitled to the same favour. The last branch of the rule is, however, sufficient for this case. If the defendant, Col. Joseph Hughes, were now moving for his dischargé, on account of the irregularities and informalities of the affidavit, which have been brought to our notice,’lie would be concluded by his appearance. [509]*509his plea, and the judgment of the Court. His bail in an action on the bail bond, cannot be intitled to more favour than he is, and cannot be permitted to plead matters, as to which he would be estopped. '

As a matter 'of strict legal right, neither the defendant, nor his bail, could raise the objection to the affidavit after plea and judgment. The objection could not be allowed, by way of plea : in other words, it is not a sufficient legal defence to an action on the bail bond. But it is said, that although not a good legal defence, yet on a rule to set aside, or stay, proceedings on the bail bond, the Court may, in the exercise of an equitable discretion, order an exoneretur to be entered on it. This, I concede, may be done in England ; but even there, the application to stay proceedings on the bail bond, is never sustained, as a matter of course; bur. it must be supported by an affidavit of merits. 3 Petersdorff’s Abr. 38. This is a rule of practice of the English Court of King’s Bench; and it is not perfectly clear, that the application would be sustained, under any circumstances, after plea or judgment in the original action. I have been able to find but one case, where it has been allowed on the motion of the bail after judgment; and that is the case of Wheelwright v.

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18 S.C.L. 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-hughes-scctapp-1831.