Moore v. Benbow
Moore v. Benbow
Opinion of the Court
It was, it is true, the common law of England, at the time when Plowden wrote, that if a debtor was imprisoned, he had nobody to look to for sustenance, but himself. If he had not the means already in store, by which he could do so, he had to depend upon private benevolence. And if any had the humanity to contribute, he lived by their bounty alone. But if this source failed him, he was left to die in the name of God.
It was a part of the common law to starve a man to death; but that same common law utterly abhorred perpetual imprisonment. This was a strange inconsistency in the same system of jurisprudence. It is to be hoped, that even in England, under their enlightened judges, it has either been abrogated, or has become obsolete.
If this law can be said to have been made of force in this State, by the act of the legislature of 1712, making such parts of the common law of force, which were not inconsistent with the particular constitutions, customs, and laws of the province ; yet it must long since have become obsolete in a country like this, where the constitution guards against oppression, and where the laws are daily liberalized in favor of insolvent debtors. The very object of the insolvent debtor’s act, passed as long ago as 1759, was expressly for the purpose of granting further relief to poor distressed, and insolvent prisoners for debt. By the aid of this law, after an insolvent debtor has been imprisoned for a certain time, he can by his oath absolve himself entirely, and forever, from all his suing
For the reasons given for my opinion, delivered' in the case of McLain v. Hayne, .sheriff' of York district, deter^ mined in this court some time ago, which was a case parallel to the* present, I am of opiiaion, that this motion ought to prevail.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.