The eighteenth section of the act of the 20th of March 1810, authorizes a constable who levies an execution, issued from a justice of the peace, to take a bond, in the following, or like words, viz: We, A. B. and C. D., or either of us, are held, and firmly bound with E. F., constable, in the sum of---, upon condition that the said A. B. shall deliver unto E. F. aforesaid, the following goods and chattels-, on the-day of-, at the house of --, which is taken in execution at the s -it of G-. H. against A. B., or pay the amount of the said execution, with costs. Witness our hand and seals, &c. The bond is taken for the forthcoming of goods, on which the constable has previously levied, and is a bail bond, which it is intended shall be executed by the defendant, with surety, conditioned in the alternative, either for the delivery of the goods taken in execution, or for payment of the amount of the execution, with costs.
Tne obligation, on which suit is brought, differs not only in form, but in substance, from the bond prescribed in the act. The obligation is given to the constable by a stranger, to which the defendant in the execution is no party, with condition to deliver property, other than the property levied, or (for in truth no levy was made) to satisfy the debt, interest and costs. These are substantial variances which avoid the instrument as a statutory obligation, the distinction being between a variance iri form and substance. The former does not avoid the bond, but the latter does, as has been held in repeated decisions. If any thing be added to the condition prescribed in the act, which is not legal, that which is inserted against the form of the act, avoids all the rest. Plowd. 66; 10 Rep. 100. But if a bond be taken, in a circumstance contrary to the provisions of the statute, that is only prescribed for the direction of the sheriff, as to take sureties, which is for his safety; or if any thing is required specially by the condition, that the act only imports, but does not literally require, such variations do not hurt. Beawfage’s Case, 10 Coke 100; Webb v. Cliffton, Cro. Eliz. 808; Blackbourn v. Michelbourn, Ibid. 852; Farmers’ Bank in Reading v. Boyer, 16 Serg. & Rawle 4. Being therefore void as a statutory obligation, the question is, is it good at common law? and we are of the opinion that it is, on the authority of Beawfage’s Case, 10 Rep. 99. A bond to pay money into court, at the return of a fieri facias, is good; for, although it be done by colour of office, and the condition is not according to the statute, yet it is valid, for the statute 23 Hen. 6, c. 9, extends only to bonds by or for prisoners. In Beawfage’s Case the doubt was, upon the general words of the act, that if the sheriffs, or any other officers, take any other obligation, in other form than is prescribed in the act, by colour of their offices, the bond shall be void. The court, however, held, upon full consideration, that since the statute 23 Hen. 6, upon a fieri facias delivered to the sheriff, he may take a bond from the defendant to pay the money into the court at the return
Judgment affirmed.