Partridge v. Emerson
Partridge v. Emerson
Opinion of the Court
As the opinion excepted to was expressed, according to the statement in the exceptions, the jury must have .understood that the yard described might be lawfully resorted to in the niglt time, by a prisoner having the liberty of the yard, or indeed Sy any prisoner for debt, however closely confined; for, during the n.ght time, there was no distinction among the prisoners for debt, excepting as to their chambers or lodgings, where they were < to be all alike restrained, as the law was when this escape is alleged to have happened.
We are, upon consideration, not. satisfied with that opinion, which plainly militates with several decisions of this Court, upon the subject of escapes committed by prisoners for debt having the liberty of the jail-yard.
If the case proved had been a case of necessity, and the place resorted to had been, as an apartment of the prison, adopted by usage as an indispensable accommodation, it might be within a reasonable construction of the statute to allow this enlargement of a prisoner’s chamber or lodgings,
3 Mass. Rep. 86, Bartlett vs. Willis Al.
[In Bartlett vs. Willis, (ubi sup.,) it was held that the debtor committed an escape by going into the prison-yard in the night time. So, in Freeman vs. Davis, (7 Mass. Rep. 200,) and Clap vs. Capon, (7 Mass. Rep. 98, S. C., 10 Mass. Rep. 373,) going into a room in the same house, in the prison-yard, in the night time, was held to be an escape. And in Burrows vs. Lowder, (8 Mass. Rep. 373,) it was held to be clear that in such case “no understanding of the justices, or permission of the jailer, could alter, by enlarging or contracting the accommodations which had been established for debtors;” and that no prisoner was entitled, in the night time, to any indulgence beyond a chamber and lodging in the apartments of the prison. Now the case finds that
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Amos Partridge versus Asa Emerson and Others
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published