Gresham v. State
Gresham v. State
Opinion of the Court
Tbe appeal is from a judgment absolute on a forfeited bail bond.
On tbe 15th of March, 1871, tbe appellants entered into an obligation of bail, in tbe form prescribed by section 4239 of tbe Eevised Code, for tbe appearance of William M. Gresham at tbe nest terna of tbe circuit court, to answer a charge of manslaughter. On tbe 16th of June, 1871, a
Tbe bail bond is in substantial compliance with tbat stated to be a proper form in section 4239 of tbe Bevised Code. It is approved by a justice of tbe peace, known to be such by tbe circuit court. Atbougb be is required by section 4022 of tbe Eevised Code to return all undertakings
The defendant Gresham was not indicted for the offense with which the magistrate charged him, and for which the bail was given, but for the highest grade of unlawful homicide, to-wit, murder. The conditional judgment does not disclose what indictment was found against the accused, but it recites the undertaking, and in other respects complies substantially with the form prescribed in section 4254 of the Eevised Code. The notice to Sprowl and J. B. Gresham, the sureties, sets out the judgment nisi, but the alias subsequently issued to W. M. Gresham, the principal, fails to do so, or to state any breach of the obligation.
The essential statement which the entry of the conditional judgment should contain is, that the accused was required to answer the charge which the recognizors have stipulated that he should answer. This is necessary to show a breach of the bond. If the accused is required to answer a charge variant from that described in the condition of the bail bond, this will not show a breach.—Howie & Morrison v. The State, 1 Ala. 113; The State v. Weaver, 18 Ala. 293. Section 4245 of the Eevised Code provides that the undertaking is forfeited by the failure of the defendant to appear, although the offense is incorrectly described in such undertaking; the particular case or matter to which the undertaking is applicable being made to appear to the court. This of course applies to such misdescriptions as, nevertheless, apprize the parties of the nature of the offense for which the indictment is to be preferred, the same being indictable. It must also be taken to apply to cases in which the indictment embraces or includes the particular indictable offense mentioned in the undertaking of bail. While it would be manifestly unjust to hold a bail bond forfeited because the accused did not appear to answer an indictment for an offense altogether different, and not even suggestive of the one mentioned in
But the judgment nisi does not state that the accused was indicted for any offense. This is a fatal omission. There could be no failure to appear without a demand for appearance, and without an indictment there could be no demand, and consequently no breach.—Hall v. The State, 15 Ala. 431; Badger & Clayton v. The State, 5 Ala. 21.
As the accused was on bail, the clerk was at liberty to make a minute entry of the indictment. — Revised Code, § 4148. If the conditional judgment had stated an indictment for murder, we think there would have been- a forfeiture of the bond by the failure of the accused to appear, notwithstanding the stipulation for a case of manslaughter.
The alias sei.fa. to W. M. Gresham was defective also in not stating a default.
The judgment, is reversed, and the cause remanded.
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- GRESHAM v. State
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