Thomasson v. Kerr
Thomasson v. Kerr
Opinion of the Court
Curia, per
By the Acts of 1817 and 1833, a prisoner confined for debt is required both to make an assignment, and to deliver to the assignee the effects contained in his schedule, before the plaintiff can be required at all to pay his jail fees. After assignment and delivery, the plaintiff in execution or mesne process may be required to pay for the subsistence of the prisoner, provided the as-signee has not enough to satisfy the same, and the prisoner himself is unable or refuses to pay, <fec. In the case before the court, the prisoner, Evans, has not complied with the requisitions of these Acts. In the first instance, it is probable that he wilfully refused to comply with the provisions, and it may be now that he is unable to do so. It must be remarked, [however, that he has reduced himself to his present situation by his own contumacy, arising, perhaps, out of a deliberate design to deprive the defendants of the benefit of their recovery against him. The case of Bryant vs. Ellis, Dudley, 71, involved the question, whether, under the then existing Acts, the sheriff was entitled to recover of a plaintiff who had lodged process against the same prisoner whose case is now before the court, the amount of his jail fees. The judgment of the court, for the entirely satisfactory reasons assigned in it, was against the demand of the sheriff. As far as we are informed, the situation of Evans, since that time, has been in no wise changed; that is, he has neither made an assignment or surrendered his property ; and but for the Act of 1839, it is conceded the sheriff would be without remedy. The sheriff’s right to recover in this action depends entirely on the construction of the last Act referred to. The 30th section of the Act of 1839, page 31, is in the following words : “ When any person shall be taken on mesne or final process, in any civil suit, and from inability to pay the demand, debt or damages, or find bail if
At the time Evans was committed to jail, he had abundant means to satisfy the damages recovered by defendants ; and he preferred going to jail rather than subjecting his property to the operation of a fi.fa. He made his own choice, and surrendered his person rather than his property. His going to jail did' not arise from inability to satisfy the demands against him. At that time he left his property, to come and surrender himself in discharge of his bail ; and by his voluntary imprisonment, he has deprived his creditors of the means and security which, they would otherwise have .had a right to resort to, in satisfaction of their recovery. For, if he had not taken off his property when first arrested; or if, after he had given bail, he had remained out of the State, these judgments would have been satisfied, either by his property or his bail bond. In the first instance, then, even under the Act of 1839, the prisoner was not in a situation to subject the defendants to liability. But in the second place, had he, at the time these actions were commenced, no lands, goods, or choses in action, whereby his maintenance in jail could be defrayed ? There was no evidence .that he had divested himself of the property which he had when he was committed, much less that it had been destroyed or wasted, so that it afforded no available income subject to the control of the prisoner. All that was said was, that the property was out of the State, and could not be reached by the sheriff. That may be, and still the prisoner may have abundant means at his command; he may have had regularly transmitted to him the proceeds of his crops, and have his money at interest, or in bank ; and in such cases the sheriff
We think that the sheriff in this case was bound to have shown that Evans was unable to pay, for the want of means, before he could hold the present defendants liable to the demands against them; and it may be, that at the time this action was commenced, Evans’s means were entirely wasted or destroyed by the act of God, or by the wilful acts of others, without any fault on his part. And if so, the sheriff ought not to b'e compelled to support him, but might be authorized to discharge him under the
According to these views, we think a new trial should be granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.