5 Mass. 310 | Mass. | 1809
The opinion of the Court was afterwards delivered by
From the facts before us in this case, we are tc decide whether the defendant was guilty of a misfeasance in his office, for which he is liable in this action.
The execution was properly directed to the coroner, as the judgment debtor was a deputy of the sheriff
In the present case, the sheriff was not at the gaol, nor any deputy, to receive and confine Minott. For Minott being the only gaol-keeper, he could not receive and confine himself. Minott must be considered as escaping, but the escape was committed by the sheriff; because he had no person there to receive and confine the prisoner; upon the same principle that if a sheriff make a prisoner of the gaol-keeper, and give him the keys, it is the escape of the sheriff. For the prisoner, by being the keeper and having the keys, is no longer imprisoned or restrained of his liberty. And every liberty given to a prisoner, not authorized by law, is an escape. Upon this state of facts, the coroner is guilty of no misfeasance, but the sheriff is answerable for the escape
Plaintiff nonsuit.
Note. The Chief Justice observed, after the opinion was delivered, that as the action was case, and not debt for an escape, the
Sed vide Gage vs. Graffam, 11 Mass. 183 — 184.
Gage vs. Graffam, 11 Mass. 183.
Burrill vs. Lithgow, 2 Mass. 526. — Brooks vs. Hoyt, 6 Pick. 458.