Dunbar v. Conway
Dunbar v. Conway
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of this court.
Prior to the act of 1828, ch. 161, the time at which a surrender of the principal could be made, so as to discharge the bail, was regulated by the rules of court in Baltimore, as it still is in the other county courts of the State. By the rule of the Baltimore court, the bail could only claim this privilege, at any time before the discharge of the jury at the term when the sci.fa. was returned scire fad, or the second sci.fa. returned nihil. Whatever might be the duration of the term, He could not surrender the principal after that period. Not because by the rule the term was considered as then at an end; but because the rule had selected this, as the proper period of the term, at which to limit the privilege.
In some of the courts, the first four days of the term was the limit. In others, the privilege extended during the continuous session, but not to an adjourned session of the same term, and in others not at such adjourned session, without the particular and special order of the court, after hearing the facts.
The law of 1828, was designed chiefly to expedite suits, and enable claimants to obtain more speedily, judgments against debtors. The result of, the practice which it introduced, was to enable a plaintiff to obtain his judgment; sue out his capias
The counsel for the appellee has relied on two grounds, to
The first ground is, that the act of 1828, which extended this indulgence to the bail by its terms, limited the last day, (and of course, as he rightly contends, the last hour of of that day,) to which the term could be extended. It would be difficult to avoid this conclusion, in the case he assumes.
If the law peremptorily requires that the term, say the May term, shall end on the last day of August, it could not be adjourned to the first day of September, and no act done on that day, could be considered as done within the legal period of the term. It is not necessary to decide how far this may have been the case, while the act of Assembly or that part of it was in force, which did in terms limit the period to which the ¡session might be adjourned. It is now confessedly repealed, and the existing law by which the terms of the court are prescribed, does not designate any particular day at which the May term must end. It directs a day on which the next or September term shall commence; but it does not follow, that therefore the May term cannot be held at any earlier hour of the same day — on the contrary we are justified in saying, there is not a court in the State, in which the constant and uniform practice does not establish the directly opposite opinion. The next ground relied on, is the practice of the court of Baltimore under this rule, as stated in the exception. The constant practice of this court, will be found to conform in respect to the duration of the term, to all the other courts in the State, for in the exception, we find the following as part of the courts “opinion,"” ffit being the constant practice to adjourn the term ovex to the morning of the court in course.” The court do assign as the reason of this opinion, their belief, that “the uniform practice, under their late rule has been, that the principal may be' discharged by surrender' of his bail, upon payment of costs, at any time during the sitting of the court, to which the scire facias against the bail is returnable, and before the jury is discharged.” This practice, as we have seen, will in a
The counsel for the appellee, without relying on the point, has suggested for consideration, whether on the authority of Carroll vs. Barber, 6 Har. & John. 154, an appeal will lie in this case. The distinction between the two cases is obvious. There the direction of the court below was appealed to, by a party who asked for an extension of the rule, not for its application — here the objection is, that the court refused to do an act, not depending on an admitted discretion, but required by the peremptory terms, as well of the act of Assembly, as of the rule of court. This court has always regarded a legitimate rule of court, as prescribing a law to the court. The proper office of such a rule, is to establish fixed and settled practice, to which the court is required to conform, and any error of opinion in respect either to its legal effect, or to its ap
JUDGMENT REVERSED AND PROCEDENDO AWARDED.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- George T. Dunbar, special bail of J. and W. Dunbar v. Thomas Conway, survivor of William Drury
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published