Hunt v. Allen
Hunt v. Allen
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
To an action upon a bail bond, the defendants pleaded that there was not “an affidavit made and filed of the cause of action ” before the issuing of the writ of capias, by virtue of which the defendants in the original suit were arrested and held to bail. The defendants do not deny the making of the bond, nor that the condition of the bond was forfeited. Their plea is, that the bond cannot be enforced because the proceeding in the original action was illegal. The only question now presented for consideration is, can that defence be set up by way of plea to an action on the bond. This question resolves itself into another, viz., is the bond void by reason of that illegality. If it is, then and then only, is the plea good.
It is admitted that the arrest in the original action was illegal The defendant in that suit might have been discharged
It seems, at first view, reasonable to conclude that if a statute expressly requires an act to be done before the capias is issued, if the act be not done, the capias and all the proceedings under it, are not only voidable, but void. But the law has been long and well settled, that however irregular the proceeding may be for lack of the requisite affidavit, the capias is not therefore void ¡ and the reason assigned is, that the power of arrest emanates not from the affiadvit but from the capias.
In Arundel v. White, 14 East 225, Lord Ellenborough thus clearly states the office of the statute 12 George I., of which ours is a copy : “ All that the statute requires, as to the affidavit, is restrictive of the plaintiff’s right to arrest by virtue of the plaint; it does not give the power of arrest. That power emanates from the plaint, and the statute only restrains the exercise of it till the affidavit is made. Long antecedent to the statute, the arrest was made upon the plaint levied before any affidavit.”
That the capias is not held to be void by reason of a defective affidavit, is apparent from the fact, that the practice of the court, where the defendant himself applies for relief ou the ground that the affidavit is not in compliance with the statute, is not to quash the capias, and discharge the action, but to discharge the defendant from custody uppu entering an appearance or filing common bail. The suit continues, which could not be if the capias was void. 1 Arch. Prac. 58; Tidd’s Prac. 165; Impey’s Prac. K. B. 112.
That there was no writ or process, is a good plea by the bail. So that the original writ was void, has been held a good plea. Because, in either ease, there was no suit pending in
But if there was an action pending, in which the bail bond might have been given, although the arrest was illegal or although the defendant was never arrested, the bail in an action upon the bail bond cannot avail themselves of the defence. In Watkyns v. Parry, 1 Stran. 444, it was held that bail could not traverse the arrest of their principal; and the same point was ruled in Bean v. Parker, 17 Mass. 600.
This point was directly decided upon the construction of the -English statute, 12 George I., in the case of Wiskard v. Wilder, 1 Burr. 430. Lord Mansfield, in that case, said, the affidavit does not appear to be an essential requisite to the validity of the bail bond, nor in the nature of a condition precedent to it; but, on the contrary, the statute appears to be only directory to the sheriff. So that though the sheriff may be himself answerable for such an omission, yet the bond is not void. My. Justice Denison said, the act does not make the proceedings void in case the defendant be arrested without affidavit and marking the sum sworn to upon the back of the writ. It .only prohibits the sheriff and plaintiff from doing it. They .may, indeed, be liable to an action for it, but it does not make the bail bond void. Mr. Justice Foster concurred. He said, the act is only directory. It does not make the process void. •And if the fact was so that there was no affidavit, the defendant might have been relieved in a much easier method by applying to the courts or to a judge to be discharged upon common bail.
This was the unanimous decision of a very enlightened ■bench upon the very question involved in this case. The decision was made upon the form of pleading, but it turned upon the question whether the bail bond was or was not void. That was the question discussed by counsel and decided by the court. That decision was made in 1757. It has stood for nearly a century the acknowledged rule of law. True, it has been questioned, (and what legal principle has not ?) but it has never been overruled.
There are, doubtless, to be found in the books precedents of
But in all such cases it is apprehended the plea is sustained, not upon the ground that the bond is void for defect of the affidavit, but because the plaintiff, by needlessly averring the fact in his declaration, has made it material, and may be put to the proof of it.
In Wilcoxon v. Nightingale, 4 Bing. 501, the defendant demurred to a declaration against the sheriff for an escape, “ because it was not averred that the writ was endorsed for bail by virtue of an affidavit of the cause of action, made and filed of record.” Park, J., on overruling the demurrer, said— “ The precedents are both ways. If the filing of the affidavit be stated, the courts hold that it must be proved, but it is not necessary to state it.” The same principle is contained in Webb v. Herne, 1 Bos. & Pal. 281; Arundel v. White, 14 East 223.
It is an elementary rule of pleading, that every fact material to the cause must be averred in the declaration, and proved upon the trial. But it has never been held necessary, either in an action against the sheriff for an escape or in an action upon the bail bond, to aver that an affidavit of the cause of action was made and filed in the original suit. Nor will the plaintiff be required to prove such fact upon the trial, unless it be rendered necessary by a needless averment in the plaintiff’s declaration.
The court, in Whiskard v. Wilder, held that the English statute in regard to bail was directory only ; that if its provisions were not complied with the party aggrieved could have redress, but that it did not avoid the bond. This appears to be the only rational construction of the statute. The statute of this state respecting bail in civil actions (Rev. Stat. 950) requires — 1st. That an affidavit shall be made and filed of the cause of action, and specifies the officer before 'whom the affidavit shall be made. 2d. That the sum specified in the affidavit shall be endorsed on the writ. 3d. That for the sum so endorsed the sheriff' shall take bail, and no more. And 4th.
If the plaintiff neglect to make the affidavit, or make it before an improper officer, if the clerk neglect to file the affidavit, if the amount be erroneously endorsed upon the capias, or if the sheriff err in taking bail, in either event the requirements of the statute are not complied with. But can these ille-. galities be pleaded in avoidance of the bail bond ? Some of these requirements, it will be conceded, are directory merely, and cannot affect the validity of the bond. Thus it has been held, that if the clerk omit to file the affidavit, the bail bond is not thereby made void. But if the statute be directory only in one of its requirements, it would seem, upon principle, that it must be so in all.
Bail to the-action, who are bound for the defendant's appearance after judgment, may take advantage of an illegality, or even an irregularity, in the capias ad satisfaciendum, because it is in the nature of notice to them, and therefore they are interested in the proceeding. Boggs v. Chichester, 1 Green 209.
But the bail to the sheriff have no such interest in the original writ. If the objection of the want of an affidavit be available to the bail in an action upon the bail bond, with much more reason it should avail the sheriff in an action against him. for an escape. The defence was once attempted in such an action, and Justice Park said the objection was most frivolous, and if admitted would be a disgrace to the law. 4 Bing. 501.
The case of an appeal bond, though not precisely analogous, may furnish some aid by way of illustration. The law requires an affidavit as the foundation of an appeal. If there be no affidavit, the appeal is illegally prosecuted, and will be dismissed. If the objection be taken-, and the appeal dismissed on this ground, the court will not permit the appeal bond to be taken from the files for prosecution. But if no objection be made to the validity of the appeal by the parties to the suit, and an action be brought upon the appeal bond, can the obligors plead in avoidance that the appeal was illegal for want
If there be any doubt as to the true construction of the statute, sound policy requires that its provisions should be regarded as directory, and that the bail should not be permitted in an action upon the bond to avail themselves of the defence here attempted. Either the defendant in the original action or the bail might have obtained summary relief by timely application to the court. The bail bond would have been cancelled, the defendant admitted to common bail, and the plaintiff permitted to proceed to judgment against the original defendants. Full relief would have been afforded without delay and without costs. But to permit the bail to set up the defence by plea to an action on the bond insures not only a greater amount of costs and expenses, but does the plaintiff an injury which cannot be repaired. Courts have gone far in relieving bail upon terms, but never to the prejudice of the plaintiff in the original action. Had the defendant or the bail availed themselves of this objection in the original action, the bail would have been discharged, but the plaintiff would long since have obtained judgment against the defendant. But by laches in making the objection, if it is now suffered to prevail, the original action is lost; the statute of limitations has intervened, and not only are the bail discharged, but the original cause of action is also lost to the plaintiff.
That this objection is now for the first time to prevail after the lapse of a century since the enactment of the statute, is a very persuasive argument against its validity.
The judgment must be affirmed.
For affirmance — The Chief Justice, and Judges Ogden, Porter, Schenck, and Cornelison — 5.
For reversal — The Chancellor, and Judges Risley, Wills, and Valentine — 4.
Judgment affirmed.
Cited in State v. Dunn, 1 Dutch. 218.
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