Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1868

Brewer v. Commonwealth

Brewer v. Commonwealth
Court of Appeals of Kentucky · Decided June 17, 1868 · Hardin
66 Ky. 550; 3 Bush 550; 1868 Ky. LEXIS 25

Brewer v. Commonwealth

Opinion of the Court

JUDGE HARDIN

delivered tue opinion op the court:

Finis E. Brewer was arrested under a bench warrant from the Todd circuit court, issued on an indictment against him for the crime, of malicious stabbing, and was released from custody by the sheriff on the execution of a bail bond for him by the appellants, as allowed by section 78 of the Criminal Code, in the sum of one hundred dollars.

The record shows that Brewer appeared in court and moved to continue the prosecution; and the court having overruled his motion, and also a demurrer to the indictment, he waived a formal arraignment and pleaded “ not *551guilty;” but before a jury had been empanneled and sworn to try him, he moved the court to set aside the indictment on the ground that it had not been indorsed “ a true bill” by the foreman of the grand jury, and the court sustained the motion and ordered that the charge against defendant be submitted to another grand jury, and that the defendant be permitted to stand upon his bail bond.

It seems that another indictment was returned against-Brewer, although it is not copied in the record, and that said Brewer failed to appear in discharge of his bail bond,” which was, therefore, forfeited; and the appellants, the bail, being proceeded against, they claimed exoneration, on the ground that Brewer having appeared, the court discharged their liability by its order permitting Brewer to stand on his bail bond.

According to section 160 of the Criminal Code, the liability of the appellants would not have been affected by setting the indictment aside and re-submitting the case to the grand jury, if no order had been made allowing Brewer to stand on his bond. The order, therefore, allowing what the law permitted without it, in the absence of any other order or direction of the court, and which did not impair the rights of the bail to release or indemnify themselves in any of the modes prescribed by law, did not, in our opinion, discharge them from liability ; and this conclusion substantially accords with the opinion of this court in the case of Miller vs. Commonwealth (1 Duvall, 19), so far as the same point was involved in that case.

Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.

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