Tappan v. Bellows

1 N.H. 100
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 15, 1817
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N.H. 100 (Tappan v. Bellows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tappan v. Bellows, 1 N.H. 100 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1817).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Richardson, C. J.

It is not contended that this action could have been maintained, had the sureties in the bonds been duly approved. But admitting they were not duly approved, and in fact that they were not approved at all, it is very apparent that the plaintiff can have sustained no possible injury on that account. For if the debtor continued a true prisoner within the limits of the prison, the object which the bonds were intended to secure has been fully obtained. If the prisoner did not continue within the limits, but escaped, the plaintiff has now his remedy upon the bonds, to recover his debt and ten per cent, interest, from the time of commitment; and it is admitted that the sureties are able to pay.

The plaintiff, then, demands of the sheriff the debts for which Lumas was committed, not on the ground that any act or omission of the sheriff has been injurious to him, but on the ground that the bitter letter of the statute, read according to. his own sense, gives him those debts. His claim rests altogether on strict rigid law. Notwithstanding this, [102]*102if his claim be well founded in law, it must be allowed. Bui in a case of tills kind we ought to be satisfied that the statute, construed according to its clear and obvious intent and object, is in his favor, before we sustain his action.

The statute upon which the question in this case arises, is entitled “An act for the ease and relief of persons imprisoned for debt” ; and provides that any person imprisoned for debt, &c. shall be permitted and allowed to have a chamber, &c., such prisoner giving bond to the creditor, with two sufficient sureties, being freeholders in this state, to be bound jointly and severally, in double the sum for which such prisoner is imprisoned, with a condition in the form prescribed by the statute.

It may be well to consider, in the first place, what construction must have been given to the statute, had it stopped here. It is clear that upon procuring a bond in all respects conformable to the requisitions of the statute, the debtor would have been entitled to the privilege, whether the creditor consented or not; and it would have been the duty of the gaoler, and he might have been compelled, to allow it. But as a bond conformable to the statute would have been the only foundation of the debtor’s claim to the privilege, if the bond had: been defective in any particular required by the statute, the debtor would not have been entitled to the privilege; and, if the gaoler had in such case allowed it, he would have been guilty of suffering an escape. Hence it is evident that the gaoler must at his peril have judged of the sufficiency of the bond.

The bond must have been accurate in the following particulars, to have answered the requisitions of the statute.

1. It must have been given to the creditor as the obligee.

2. It. must have been executed by the debtor and two sureties.

3. The sureties must have been freeholders in this state.

4. The sureties: must have been sufficient.

5. The debtor and sureties must have been bound jointly and severally.

[103]*1036. They must have been bound in double the sum for which the debtor was imprisoned.

7. The bond must have had a condition in the form prescribed by the statute.

It is apparent that there could have been no difficulty in determining whether the bond was defective in any of these particulars, except the sufficiency of the sureties. As many individuals who are apparently in good circumstances are not in fact so, it might have been a hardship upon the gaoler to decide in every ease at his own peril upon the sufficiency of the sureties who might lie offered.

It would have been of no consequence to the creditor whether the gaoler decided right or wrong ; because, if the sureties were in fact sufficient, he would have been safe in case an escape of the debtor took place ; and if the gaoler granted the privilege when the sureties were riot sufficient, that would have been an escape, and the creditor would have been instantly entitled to recover His debt of the sheriff. So that the creditor’s security required no further provisions in the statute. But the gaoler’s security did require further provisions ; and it was accordingly provided that if the sureties be not approved by the creditor, <fcc., then any two justices,-&c., approving thereof, and certifying such their approbation on the back of said bond, shall be deemed sufficient. It is very evident thit this clause in the statutes relates only to the sufficiency of the sureties, and leaves the gaoler still to judge at his peril of the sufficiency of the bond in other respects. If the justices certify that the sureties are sufficient, their certificate will forever preclude the creditor from denying their sufficiency; but no certificate can preclude him from denying the sufficiency of the bond in other respects. If the creditor agree to accept the sureties, he will be forever estopped to deny their sufficiency, although the bond be not approved by the magistrates ; and upon such agreement he would have been estopped in the same manner had the clause of the statute now under consideration been omitted.

[104]*104Tlic operation of this danse in the act can in no case lie °f any advantage to the creditor, but may in some cases be injurious to him. It 1ms been before shewn, that without this clause he would have been secure at all events; but now, in case the sureties approved by the magistrates should turn out to be insolvent, the creditor would be estopped from shewing it, and might lose his debt. But this provision: is for the benefit of the gaoler, because it renders him safe at all events, if he choose to avail himself of it.

We come, then, to the question, Is the certificate of the justices essential under the statute in every case where the sureties have not been approved by the creditor ? If such certificate be essential, it must be either,

1. Because the plain letter or manifest intent of the statute has made it so — or,

2. Because the security of the creditor requires us to put such construction upon the statute as shall make it so.

It will hardly be contended that the plain letter of the statute makes the certificate essential. It is declared that, a certificate being made, the sureties shall be esteemed sufficient ; but it certainly is not declared, that in case there is no certificate they shall be deemed insufficient.

Nor is there any expression in the statute which shews it to have been the intent of the makers of it, that a certificate should be essential.

It is declared “that the sheriff or gaol-keeper shall not “ be liable to any action for any escape of such prisoner “ after the executing of such bond.” It is said, such bond”, here means a bond for sureties duly approved; that it is tantamount to saying, “ after the executing of such bond as aforesaid, with sureties approved as aforesaid.” But is such the manifest intent of the statute ? The making and executing of such bond as the statute intended is one thing — -the justices’ approbation of the sureties is another. “After the executing of such bond,” What bond ? The answer is obvious: such bond as the statute had before pre - scribed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.H. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tappan-v-bellows-nhsuperct-1817.