85 A. 501 | Md. | 1912
The facts contained in this record are simple and undisputed. On May 24th, 1911, Herbert Backus was indicted by the Grand Jury of Baltimore County for the statutory crime of gambling. He pleaded guilty to the charge and was sentenced by the Court to pay a fine of two hundred dollars and costs. This sentence was imposed on the 15th day of August, 1911, and on the following day Backus went before the clerk of the Court accompanied by John E. O'Connor and Julia O'Connor, and each signed the following paper, presumably written upon the docket containing the record of the case and the sentence of the Court:
"Aug. 16, 1911. Fine and costs superseded by us for six months. Witness our hands and seals this 15th day of August, 1911.
HERBERT BACKUS (Seal). JOHN E. O'CONNOR (Seal). JULIA O'CONNOR (Seal).
Witness:
THOMAS R. JENIFER. *538
After this paper had been signed, Backus was permitted to go at large. He has never since been apprehended, and has not paid the fine and costs imposed upon him.
In December, 1911, a writ of fieri facias was issued upon this so-called "supersedeas," and was levied upon certain described property of John E. and Julia O'Connor. Thereafter John E. O'Connor filed a motion to quash the writ and for such other relief as might be proper in the premises. The appeal before us is from the order of the lower Court overruling this motion.
We are of opinion that the writ should have been quashed, for the reason that the paper we have transcribed is a mere nullity. The clerk had no authority to take it, and it did not supersede or affect in the slightest degree the execution of the sentence of the Court, and is not such a judgment upon which an execution may be issued.
Under Art.
The sentence imposed upon Backus could have been stayed; first, by a new trial granted by the Courts; and, secondly, by an appeal taken in conformity to Art. 5, § 80, of the Code of 1912. That section provides that "no appeal in a criminal case shall stay execution of sentence unless the counsel for the accused shall make oath that the appeal is not taken for delay; and such appeal shall be heard at the earliest convenient day after the same shall have been transmitted to the Court of Appeals; and the accused, upon taking such appeal, shall, in all cases not punishable by death, or imprisonment in the penitentiary, be entitled to remain on bail, and in other cases not capital the Court from which the appeal is taken shall have the discretionary power to *539 admit to bail; provided nothing herein contained shall be construed to prohibit the Court from requiring additional or greater bail, pending an appeal, then the accused may already have given before conviction."
The appellee relies upon sec. 40, Art. 87 of the Code (1912) to sustain the order appealed from. Sec. 39 of that Article declares that the sheriff shall be answerable for all fines, penalties and forfeitures imposed on the inhabitants of his county or of Baltimore City by any Court of Record of this State unless he can show that the party on whom the same was imposed is insolvent.
By sec. 40 of Art. 87, it is provided that the sheriff "may require the State's Attorney to issue an execution for all fines, penalties or forfeitures so imposed and the costs; provided that any person adjudged to pay a fine or penalty may enter into a recognizance with security for the payment of the same and costs within sixty days, and no execution shall issue for the same until the expiration of sixty days."
This section is a codification of the Acts of 1795, Chapter 74, as amended by the Acts of 1828, Chapter 11. The first named Act was passed, but as its preamble recited, to remove the doubts which then existed whether a writ of capias ad satisfaciendum could be issued for the recovery of any fine, penalty or forfeiture. By the latter Act the person upon whom any fine had been imposed was authorized to give security in the usual manner for the payment of the same and costs, and when such security had been given no execution could lawfully be issued until the expiration of sixty days from the date upon which such security had been given.
Assuming, without so deciding, that a recognizance taken in conformity to section 40, Article 87 would stay the execution ofsentence as well as execution on the judgment, that section cannot be invoked to sustain the order appealed from; first, because no recognizance was given as provided by that section; and secondly, no execution could be issued on such a recognizance, had one been given, until the recognizance had been properly forfeited. "A recognizance is an obligation of *540
record, and when forfeiture is declared and entered by the Court it becomes a judgment. It is then like an ordinary judgment enforceable by execution." Schultze v. State,
A supersedeas properly taken by the clerk under this section is in itself a judgment upon which an execution may issue, and it operates to stay the execution of the original judgment for six months thereafter. The power and jurisdiction conferred upon justices of the peace to take supersedeas of judgments and decrees are found in section 56, Article 52 of the Code. The form of the supersedeas is therein given, and the judgment is confessed in favor of the plaintiff in the original judgment. Section 58 of Article 52 provides that when a judgment has been confessed in the Circuit Court at the second term thereof with stay of execution until the next term, the stay of execution bysupersedeas on such judgment shall be computed from the first Thursday of the term next ensuing the said second term; and when the judgment of the justice of the peace is superseded, the stay of execution shall be computed from the date of the judgment and not from the date of the supersedeas. Administrators are also given the right to supersede judgments rendered against them. No power is conferred upon the clerk of the Criminal Court of Baltimore City to take supersedeas of a judgment rendered in that Court. On the contrary that Court is omitted in the enumeration of the Courts whose *541 judgments may be superseded. This circumstance, taken in connection with the language employed in the legislation upon the subject, indicates an intention on the part of the Legislature to confine the right of supersedeas to judgments and decrees recovered in civil actions. This conclusion is strengthened by an examination of the Act of 1791, Chapter 67 for regulating the mode of staying an execution upon a judgment or decree. The form of the supersedeas there given indicates clearly that the Legislature did not intend it to apply to a judgment in criminal cases.
But if it be admitted that sec. 28 of Art. 17 of the Code (1904) is applicable to judgments in criminal cases the fi. fa. should have been quashed, because the supersedeas upon which it was issued is utterly invalid. It is invalid because it disregards the substantial requirements of the statute. InBowes v. Isaacs,
For the reasons we have stated, the order of the lower Court must be reversed.
Order reversed and case remanded that an order may be passedin conformity with this opinion.