Smith v. Collins

42 Kan. 259
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 Kan. 259 (Smith v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Collins, 42 Kan. 259 (kan 1889).

Opinion

Opinion by

Simpson, C.:

One L. H. Bowlus was charged with the crime of embezzling school funds belonging to District No. 2, of Barber county. He was arrested, taken before a justice of the peace in that county, had a preliminary examination, and was bound over to appear before the district court of that county. At the May term, 1881, he made an application for a change of venue, and the case was sent to the district court of Harper county for trial. In the district court of Harper county the case was continued from term to term, until the July term, 1882, when it was continued until the next term; and in default of bail in the sum of $3,000, the defendant Bowlus was committed to the jail of Harper county.

On the 5th day of August, 1882, Bowlus tendered to the sheriff a bond, of date July 31, 1882, for his appearance at the next term, signed by Hiram Raff and Charles Collins as sureties, and this bond was approved, and the defendant released from custody. Bowlus appeared at the next term of court, being the March term, 1883, was tried and found guilty, and disappeared before sentence was pronounced. On the 14th day of April, during the March term, a forfeiture of the recognizance was adjudged by the court. The county attorney brought suit on the forfeited recognizance, in Harper [260]*260county, and a summons was issued and personally served on Hiram Raff and Charles Collins, by the sheriff of Reno county, they being residents of that county, and never having resided in Harper county. Bowlus was not found, and the only persons served in the action were Raff and Collins, there being no surety on the recognizance residing in Harper county. A judgment was rendered against Raff and Collins in due time for the amount of the recognizance, $3,000, and costs. An execution was issued, and directed to the sheriff of Reno county; and Raff and Collins then commenced this action to restrain the sheriff of Reno county from levying the execution, and to perpetually enjoin the collection of the judgment. The board of county commissioners of Harper county were made parties on their application, and a trial was had at the July term, 1887, of the Reno county district court, which resulted in a judgment perpetually enjoining the collection of the judgment. The case was then brought here for review.

While there have been elaborate briefs filed, and a somewhat protracted oral argument made on the various questions raised in this case, its disposition in this court turns upon the one single question, as to whether or not a recognizance in a criminal case must be sued on in the county in which it was forfeited. Strictly speaking, a recognizance is a debt confessed to the state, which may be avoided upon the conditions stated. At common law the forfeiture of the recognizance was equivalent to a judgment, but no execution was awarded against the cognizors until after the return of a soire facias. The sole object of the writ of soire facias in cases of this character was to notify the sureties on the recognizance of the default of their principal, and give them an opportunity to show cause why the forfeiture should not be enforced by execution. Another theory of the common law was, that the cognizors, by an acknowledgment of the cognizance, had already submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court. Out of these two propositions — first, that the forfeiture of the recognizance was equivalent to a judgment, and second, that [261]*261by an acknowledgment of the recognizance the recognizors had submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of the court— grew a universal rule, that recognizances must be prosecuted in the court in which they were taken or acknowledged, or to which they were returned. This rule is in force to-day in this state, unless changed by statute. We have been unable to find any statutory definition of a recognizance, by the legislature of this state. The word recognizance is used in the statutes with reference to its well-defined legal meaning. And while the mode of taking them, and of enforcing the forfeiture, is changed in some respects to conform to our system of procedure, their legal characteristics still remain. They are not taken and acknowledged in open court, except perhaps in rare instances. When they are so taken, the appearance and acknowledgment of the recognizors are entered on the journals of the court. The usual mode now is by a written obligation and acknowledgment, and this is returned to the clerk, and is recorded in a book kept for that purpose, and called the recognizance docket. Erom the time of filing with the clerk, it has the same effect as if taken in open court. (Crim. Code, § 144.) The effect of this legislation is to make recognizances taken out of court, by the officers authorized by law to take them, a part of the record of. the criminal case in which they are taken. They are still an obligation to the state, which may be avoided by the cognizors by producing the body of the person charged with the commission of a public offense, before the court, at such times as by the terms of the record, or the order of the court, he is required to appear. While they may be contracts, in the same sense that a judgment is a contract, they are not contracts within the ordinary significance of that word. The forfeiture of a recognizance is declared by the statute. (Crim. Code, §152.)

“If, without sufficient excuse, the defendant neglect to appear for trial or judgment, or upon any other occasion when his presence in court may be lawfully required according to the condition of his recognizance, the court must direct the fact to be entered upon its minutes, and the recognizance of bail, [262]*262or money deposited as bail, as the case may be, is thereupon forfeited.”

It is not necessary that there shall be a formal and express declaration by the court that the recognizance is forfeited. The fact that the defendant did not appear at the time required by the terms and conditions of the recognizance or the order of the court, is entered on the journals as the evidence that the conditions were not complied with, and the forfeiture follows by the operation of law. It has been held in this court that it is not material in a suit on a forfeited recognizance that it be shown that the default was ever in fact entered of record. (Barkley v. The State, 15 Kas. 99.) And this is upon the theory that the default or act of omission is but the evidence of the forfeiture. As a matter of proof the record would be the best and most satisfactory evidence; but if there is no record of the default, it can be proven aliunde. (Ingram v. The State, 10 Kas. 630; Crim. Code, § 154.)

Section 332 of the criminal code provides:

“All fines and penalties imposed, and all forfeitures incurred, in any county, shall be paid into the treasury thereof, to be applied to the support of the common schools.”

Fines and penalties are imposed by the court; forfeitures are incurred by the party liable or subject to the condition. A failure to perform the condition upon which the cognizors were to be excused from paying the amount of the bond is a forfeiture imposed by the express terms of the statute, and comes within the operation of § 332 of the criminal code, quoted above. (In re Ison, 6 Ore. 469.) In the case of Blake v. Comm’rs of Johnson Co., 18 Kas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Kan. 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-collins-kan-1889.