A commitment of a debtor in execution is, by the common law, a discharge of the judgment. And it is doubtful whether there were more than two exceptions to this rule of law; first, that of the debtor’s escape from prison, without the sheriff’s consent, and second, his obtaining, by fraud, the creditor’s consent to his release from prison. These two cases are admitted exceptions to the old common law rule. Com. Dig. Escape, E; Mounson v. Cleyton, Cro. Car. 240,
The statutes of this commonwealth have altered our common law on this subject in the instances enumerated in Cheney v Whitely,
The plaintiff’s counsel has treated this as a case of escape. But the breach of the condition of the bond, given for the liberty of the prison limits, was by an omission to surrender himself to be held in close confinement, and cannot be deemed an escape from prison. Hathaway v. Crosby, 5 Shepley, 453, 454. The law entitled the defendant to the liberty of the prison limits, on his giving bond “ with a surety or sureties.” That bond was approved by two justices of the peace and of the quorum, and must therefore, by the express provision of the statute, “be deemed sufficient.” Rev. Sts. c. 97, §§ 63, 65. The fact, that the surety in the bond was not answerable thereon, does not give the plaintiff any further remedy against the defendant, than if the plaintiff had voluntarily released him from prison, on his giving insufficient security to pay the judgment. In that case, as we have seen, the plaintiff could neither maintain an action on the judgment, nor arrest the defendant again, on a new execution. Nor can he do either in this ease. The judgment is discharged, and the plaintiff’s only remedy against the defendant was on the bond, by a suit brought within a year after the time of the breach. The sum recoverable for the breach could not have been less than the amount due on the original judgment, with interest thereon, and with all the lawful charges that had arisen after the issu
Under the special provisions of the statutes of Maine, St. 1835, c. 195, and Rev. Sts. c. 148, an action of debt on the judgment well lies in a case like this. Spencer v. Garland, 2 Appleton, 75. Judgment for the defendcmt.
