7 Johns. 477 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1811
The first question raised in this case, is, whether the opposition of the plaintiff to the discharge of the defendant in the original suit, under the insolvent
By this opposition the plaintiff admitted an existing demand against the original defendant, which, undoubtedly, was the ground of his interference to prevent the discharge, but whether, at the time, he had knowledge of the escape, does not appear, nor do I think it material.
If he supposed the conduct of the prisoner fraudulent, or the measures adopted by him to obtain his discharge, illegal, he had a right to prevent it j and this could not impair his remedy against the sheriff, if any such remedy existed at the time. The case of Ravenscroft v. Eyles (2 Wils. 295.) would then be in point.
The next question is, whether the alleged escape is cured by the statute of 1810.
By the facts disclosed, it does not appear' that the defendant had knowledge of the prisoner’s being without the gaol liberties; and even if it had been known to him, he had no right to restrain him, but could only resort to his bond for a breach of the condition; and if that statute is inoperative, the same remedy must exist here as in the case of Tillman v. Lansing; yet there the sheriff evidently knew it, and had seen the prisoner without the gaol liberties. Although, in this instance, it may be attended with peculiar hardship to the officer, the statutes upon which that decision is founded, if not explained by the last law, must continue to operate according to the construction given to them by this court. It must, however,, be conceded, that this is a rigid interpretation of those statutes, manifestly intended for the benefit of debtors only, but destroying an existing remedy on the part of the officer; for at common law the defence now set up would have been sufficient to protect the sheriff; nor can I think that the legislature contemplated to increase his responsibility at the time; yet if the last law is disregarded., this must be the effect of
To say that the statutes so plainly manifest the intention of the legislature, in relation to the sheriff’s responsibility, as to render the declaratory act inconsistent, is not warranted by what appears from the statutes theniselves. I think the construction given to them by this court may well be viewed as unforeseen, and not intended, at the time they were passed; and that, without a violation of constitutional rights, that intention may properly become a subject of legislative explanation, so that no innocent man, by a literal construction, may re-, ceive damage, consonant to the rule laid down by Lord Coke, (1 Inst. 360.) that acts of parliament are to be so. construed as no man that is innocent or free from injury or wrong, be, by a literal construction, punished or endamaged;' and in that point of view the last law is entitled to notice.
The third section of this statute enacts, that nothing contained in the act, entitled, an act relative to gaols, or in the act rendering bonds taken for the gaol liberties ássignable, and for other purposes, shall be so construed as to prevent any sheriff, in case of escapes, from availing himself, as at common law, of a defence arising, from a recaption on fresh pursuit, and a returning of the. prisoner within the custody of such officer before an action shall be commenced for the escape.
It appears by this section, that such a construction shall be given to those statutes as not to prevent any sheriff from setting up the defence he had at common la-w; evidently embracing all such cases as have arisen since the statutes mentioned in this act were passed, arid such as might thereafter be presented to the courts ; otherwise it was not necessary to state the true interpretation of those statutes; the defence might have been secured to the officer without it.
If those statutes had explicitly avowed the intention of
I think this case is clearly distinguishable from known vested right, to which the doctrine cited from 4 Bac. would apply; that no statute ought to have a retrospect beyond the time of its commencement; but when we are convinced that it was the received opinion, after the passing of the statutes relative to gaols and gaol liberties, that sheriffs might avail themselves of this defence, and that those laws are not so positive as to supersede the necessity, or preclude the right of legislative explanation. Though the maxim of communis error facit jus, does not strictly apply; yet I am of opinion, under the circumstances of the case, the declaratory act must control this decision, and that the construction of the legislature must prevail.
There is nothing in the state constitution to prevent legislative interference; and being in the nature of a tort, ■ and not a contract, this question cannot be áffected by the constitution of the United States, which, in the 10th section, declares, that no state shall pass an ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts.
If by an ex post facto law is intended all retrospective statutes, as well in relation to civil as criminal matters, then this court ought to pronounce the law in question nugatory, as being against the prohibition in the constitution of the United States; but I do not think that the definition of an ex post facto law can be extended beyond criminal matters; such laws are only intended,
It will not be pretended that the operation of this law could in any vyay impair the obligation of contracts. Hence it is manifest that the constitution of the United States does not reach this case.
I am, accordingly, of opinion, that the legislature were possessed of competent authority to pass this declaratory act; and that the defendant is entitled to his defence, as at common law, according to the construction given to the former statutes by this last law, and that, consequently, the verdict must be set aside, and a new trial granted.
The only questions which it is necessary for me to consider, are, whether the 3d section of the act of the 5th of April last, (sess. 33. c. 187.) extends to escapes which had then happened, whether súits are com- ' menced or not; and whether, if it does, the legislature could pass such an act. It is enacted that nothing contained in the act entitled an act relative to gaols, or in the act rendering bonds taken for the gaol liberties assignable," and for other purposes, shall be so construed, as to prevent any sheriff, in cases of escapes, from availing himself, as at common law, of a defence arising from a recaption on fresh pursuit, and a returning of the prisoner within the custody of such officer before • an action shall be ‘ commenced for the escape.
I have no difficulty in admitting the correctness of the position in Bac. Abr. Statute, (C.) (6 Bac. Abr. 370. Gwillim’s ed. that it is in general true, that no statute is to have a retrospect beyond the time of its commencement
The case of Helmore v. Shuter and anotner, or as it is reported in some of the books, Gillmore v. Shuter, (2 Show. 17.) was decided on that principle. It was an action on a parol promise in consideration of marriage, made in 1676. The statute of frauds, 2 Car. II c. 3. enacted, that no action shall be brought from and after the 24th June, 1677, whereby to charge any person upon any agreement in consideration of marriage, unless some note or memorandum in writing be signed, &c. 1’n the report of this case in Shower, which is quite full, Scroggs, Ch. J. Wylde, J. and Jones, J. said, they believed the intention of the makers of that statute was only to prevent for the future, and that it was a cautionary law, and if el motion was made in the house of lords concerning it, they would all explain it so; besides, it would be a great mischief to explain it otherwise, to annul all promises by parol before that time, upon which men had trusted and depended, reckoning them good and valid in law, as they are yet amongst honest men; and, therefore, judgment was given for the plaintiff. The same case is reported in 2 Mod. 310. 1 Freem. 466. 2 Lev. 227. 2 Jones, 108. and 1 Vent. 330.
The case of Couch, qui tam, v. Jeffries (4 Burr. 2460.) was decided on the same principle; it was an action for the penalty for not paying the stamp duty upon an indenture. On the trial the plaintiff had a verdict; and it was moved to stay entering the judgment, the defendant having, after the verdict, paid the duty, pursuant to an act which discharged persons who had incurred penalties, upon paying the duty by a certain day, and before which it had been paid ; and the question was, whether the act related to actions commenced before its passing. Lord Mansjield placed his opinion on the intention of the le- • gisiature, which, he supposed, could not have been to take away from the person, who had incurred a great deal ot cost in prosecuting it, a vested right. Mr. J us
In these cases, the inquiry was into the intention of the legislature, taking as a leading guide, in aid of the construction, the presumption that all laws are prospective, and not retrospective.
Statutes are to be so construed as may best answer •the intention which the makers had in' view, and the intention is, sometimes, to be collected from the cause or necessity of making a statute; and a thing within the intention of the makers of a statute is as much within the statute as if it were within the letter. (6 Bac. Abr. 384. Gwillim’s ed. Stat. (I.) s. 5. and the cases there •cited.) To ascertain the intention of the legislature, it is only necessary to consider, that prior to the case of Tillman v. Lansing, (4 Johns, Rep. 45.) decided in February term, 1809, the opinion had universally obtained,. that a voluntary return of a prisoner, before action brought, (whether he had given bond for the gaol liberties or not,) in case of a negligent escápe, was a good defence to the sheriff; and in deciding that case, we put a construction on the statute relative to gaols, (though I concurred in it,) which I thought a rigid and harsh one, as respected public officers; because, it rendered them liable to be drawn in question for acts which when done were supposed not to expose sheriffs, and after the lapse of many years, when their security, in many instances, may have become irresponsible.
The act now under consideration does not, in terms, notice suits then existing, or-escapes which had then taken place ; but it does what is tantamount. It addresses itself to the judges of our courts, and requires such a construction tobe put on the two acts, as not to take away-from sheriffs the right of availing themselves of recap.
The act implies that the legislature was dissatisfied with the exposition given to the statutes relative to gaols and gaol liberties, and they manifestly intended to reinstate the law, as they conceived it was when the decision of Tillman v. Lansing took place.
If a new rule was to have been made, it is inconceivable that such terms should have been used; for a legislature to require a particular construction, contrary to the existing one, unless the anterior law would admi.t of the required construction, would be to require a fiat absurdity. I understand the legislature as saying, in effect, wq will not make a new rule, but we will require the law to be construed as it ought to have been.
It is idle, in this case, to talk of vested rights, to sue sheriffs for escapes, who have a defence arising from re-caption, or a voluntary return of the prisoner, if that right existed when the act was passed, in the opinion of the legislature; and it in fact becomes a question, in this inquiry, whether the right was vested or not, which has the supremacy, the legislature or the courts of justice. The case in Shower stands on a very different ground. When that parol promise was made it was unquestionably valid, and the promisee had a right to rely
The remaining question is, whether the legislature are inhibited, by any constitutional restraints, from passing the act. It is in vain to search for any prohibition in the state constitution ; and if the constitution of the United States denies to the state legislatures the right to enact such a statute, it must be in the 10th sect, of the first article, which provides that no state shall pass an ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts. Is this act an ex post facto law, or does it impair the obligation of contracts ? The term ex post facto is technical, and is to be construed according to the received and well understood meaning and import of it, when the constitution was adopted. Judge Blackstone (1 Comm. 46.) had explained the term. His work was
The “ Federalist,” a work of high celebrity, and which is understood to have been the production of three eminent statesmen and civilians, two of whom had been members of the convention which formed the constitution, agree that this definition is correct, and that it is so to be understood. But the term has received a judicial exposition in the supreme court of the United States, in the case of Calder and Wife v. Bull and Wife, (3 Dall. 386.) All the judges who gave opinions agree that the inhibition in the constitution, against passing ex post facto laws-by the states, is to be understood as relating to laws respecting crimes, pains and penalties; and they substantially adopt Judge Blackstone's definition. Thus far, then, there can be no objection to the act.
Itcahnot admit of an. argument that the act impairs the obligation of contracts, for the most conclusive of all reasons, because no contract exists in the case. It is an action for a tort, for the wrongful escape of a debtor in the sheriff’s custody; and it would be a waste of time to cite authorities, which are numberless, that the escape being a tort, the remedy is lost, if the sheriff should die; and there would be no relief against his representatives.
A diEculty still more formidable has been suggested, not, however, growing out of the constitution, but which equally attacks the power of the legislature. It is, as I understand, this; can a legislature, after a construction has been given to a statute by the courts of law, alter that construction by an act which has a retrospect, so as to affect existing cases ?
It is not necessary to inquire whether a legislature can,
In the progress of the cause, it appeared that the legislature of Connecticut had, in two instances, since 1762, by resolutions, or acts, granted new trials in the eourts of law; and although itt perplexed the judges, whether to consider them as acting judicially, or legislatively, they, discussed the cause on both principles. It would seem to me most certain, that it was utterly inconsistent with every principle of judicature to set aside the operation of a law of the state, which had barred the appeal, and adjudge a new law, opening it and limiting a new appeal in that case, to six months. Indeed, it surpasses my power of comprehension, to understand how a legislature can be said to act judicially, in ordering a new hearing in another court, when it was not possessed of the cause, either by appeal or writ of error. It certainly was a legislative act, in its extent of power, and in its operation, much surpassing the act under consideration, should it be construed to extend to cases
I shall not undertake to state the arguments of the judges, for considering the law or resolution of the legislature of Connecticut valid; but to me their reasoning-appears unanswerable; that the constitution having imposed no limits on the legislative pbwer reaching the present case, the consequence is, that whatever the legislative power chooses to enact would be lawfully enacted, and the judicial power cannot interpose to pronounce it void. Iredell, Justice, lays down this position; and the decision of the court, in the particular case, sanctions it. Paterson, Jusvice, who was a member of the convention, which formed and proposed the constitution of the United States, says, “ he had an ardent desire to have extended the provision'in the constitution to retrospective laws in generaland after some observations on the impropriety of such laws, he concludes, “ But on full consideration, I am .convinced, that ex post facto laws must be limited in the manner already expressed ;” evidently meaning, that a retrospective law, as such, was not prohibited by the constitution.'
, This case I conceive to be a solemn determination of the question before us; and proving that the act cannot be objected to, because it is retrospective, if it be not an ex post facto law, or a law impairing the obligation of contracts.
The construction of statutes’, undoubtedly, is a judicial function,subject, however, to the uncontrollable power of the legislature, to alter that construction in cases which have not passed to judgment; and I must insist, that our state legislature, when acting within the pale of the constitutions of the United States and of this state, has the same omnipotence which Judge Blackstone ascribes-to the British parliament: “ It has sovereign and uncontrollable authority, in the making, confirming, restraining, abrogating, repealing, reviving and expounding of laws,
Upon the tullest consideration, I am ot opinion, that-the act of the 5th of April reaches this dase, and that it is free from any constitutional objections.
Whether the act of the 5th of Aprils
1810, (33d sess. c. 187.) shall affect the plaintiff’s remedy against the sheriff, when not only the cause of action existed, but the suit had been actually instituted before the passingof the act, is the question whicíi we are called upon to decide. This act declares, that nothing contained in the act relative to gaols, passed the 30th of March, 1801, or in the act rendering bonds, taken for the gaol liberties, assignable, passed the 28th of March, 1809, shall be so construed as to prevent any sheriff, coroner, or other officer, in cases of escapes, from availing himself, as at common law, of a defence arising from recaption on fresh pursuit, and a return of the prisoner, within the custody of such officer, before the action shall be commenced for "the escape.
According to the unanimous opinion of this court, in the case of Tillman v. Lansing, (4 Johns. Rep. 45.) the true construction of the act of 1801, above referred to, went to take from the sheriff a right which' he had at common law, to avail himself of a voluntary return of the prisoner, before suit brought, as a defence in an action against him for the escape. Under this construction of that statute, the present suit was brought, and, according to the facts found in the case, the plaintiff’s right to recover against the sheriff was complete, and his suit pending, at the time the statute which is now said to devest him of that right, passed. It is repugnant to the first principles of justice, and the equal and permanent security of rights, to take, by law, the property of one individual, without his consent, and give it to another. The principle contended for, on the part of the defend
The next inquiry is, whether the legislature, by the act of the 5th of Aprils have taken away this right. It is unnecessary here to examine whether a law, admitting of such a construction, would be binding upon this court, because I am well satisfied, that according to the settled rules of interpretation, the one now before us will not admit of such a construction. If it was proper and necessary to inquire into the intention of the legislature, aliunde, by reference to other statutes on the same subject, the act of the 28th of March, 1809, affords a very strong inference that the act of the 5th of April v/as not intended to have a retrospective operation. That act was passed, only one month after the decision in
The act of the 5th of April, 1810, can be viewed in no other light than as introducing a new rule of law. It does not purport to be an explanatory statute, or profess to give a different construction to the act of 1801 than had been given to it by this court. But the legislature, proceeding on the ground, that a competent tribunal had declared, that under that act sheriffs could not avail themselves of a voluntary return of a prisoner, before suit brought, in discharge of their liability for art escape, as they might have done at common law, thought proper to restore to sheriffs this common law right, which had been taken away by the statute of 1801, and so far to repeal that statute. It is an undeniable
But if we consider this in the nature of an explanatory act, it will operate equally against the defendant’s construction; for such statutes are to be construed only according to the words, and not with any equity or intendment, as was resolved in Butler and Baker’s case, (3 Coke, 35. a.) for if any exposition should be made against the direct letter of the exposition made by parliament, there would be no end to expositions. So in the case of Dalbury Parish v. Foster, (Carthew, 396.) the doctrine laid down is, that when one statute is made explanatory of another, the court cannot vary the explanation farther than is expressed in the statute. Where the statute, of explanation is doubtful, it may have such exposition as shall be taken to stand with the scope and intention of the statute, and which shall be reasonable, as was held by the court, in Godfrey v. Wade, (Jones, 35. 19 Vin. 517. note.) An act which is to take away or clog a remedy which a party has by the common law, shall not be taken by equity; (19 Vin. 514.) and there is no reason why the same rule should not apply, where a remedy given by the statute is to be taken away. Construing this act grammatically, according to the words,' the provision is prospective, “ that nothing in the former act shall be construed to prevent,” &c. If the construction be doubtful, and the rule in Godfrey and Wade be applied, can it for a moment be questioned, that it is more just and reasonable to confine it to cases arising, or at
There is no weight in the objection, that the plaintiff’s opposition to the prisoner’s discharge from imprisonment was' a waiver of his claim on the sheriff for the pspape. He, knew nothing of the escape when he opposed the discharge, and this was essential, in order to charge him with having made an election of remedies* according- to the decision of the court, in the case of Rawson & Turner. (4 Johns. Rep. 474.) A party can never be said to have made an election between two remedies, when he was totally ignorant of one of them. I am accordingly against the motion for a new trial.
The motion on the part of the defendant for a new trial was made upon two grounds:
1, That the plaintiff affirmed his debt, iii custody, subsequent to the escape.
2. That the statute of the 5th of April last allows the defendant to avail himself of the return of the prisoner before suit brought.
1. The mere fact of opposing the debtor’s discharge without having, at the time, any knowledge of the previous escape, cannot conclude the plaintiff. He undoubtedly might, with knowledge of the escape, have waived his remedy against the defendant, and have elected to affirm his debtor in custody under the succeeding sheriff; but without such knowledge the law will not infer any determination of the party preju
2. The next question is, whether the act of the 5th of April last created any new plea in bar of the action.
The words of the act are, that nothing contained in the act entitled, an act relative to gaols, passed March 30, 1801, or in the act entitled, an act rendering bonds taken for the gaol liberties assignable, and for other purposes, passed March 28, 1809, shall be so construed as to prevent any sheriff, coroner, or other officer, in cases of escapes, from availing himself, as at common law, of a defence arising from a recaption on fresh pursuit, and a returning of the prisoner within the custody of such officer, before an action shall be commenced for the escape.”
As this act was passed, not only after the escape in question, but after suit brought, it cannot apply to and govern this case, but in one-of two ways. It must be considered either as creating a new rule for the government of the past case, or as declaring the interpretation of the former statutes for the direction of the courts.
I think it can be shown, that upon principles of law and the constitution, the act cannot be adjudged to operate in either of those points of view; and I should be unwilling to consider any act as so intended, unless that intention was made manifest by express words, because it would be a violation of fundamental principles, which is never to be presumed.
This act, according to a very natural and reasonable construction, is prospective, and applies only to escapes happening after the passing of it. If it meant that the
A review of the cases on this subject may be interesting and instructive.
It is a principle in the English common law, as an- ) cient as the law itself, that a statute, even of its omnipo- ' tent parliament, is not to have a retrospective effect. Nova constitutio futuris formara imponere debet, et non prceteritis. (Bracton, lib. 4. fol. 228. 2 Inst. 292.) This • was the doctrine as laid down by Bracton and Coke; and ' in Gilmore v. Shuter (2 Mod. 310. 2 Lev. 227. 2 Jones, 108.) it received a solemn recognition in the court of? K. B. In that case a suit was brought after the 24th of June, 1677, upon a parol promise made before that date, ‘ but to be performed after that date, and the question was, whether it was void by the statute of frauds and perjuries, which enacted, that “ from and after the 24th , of June, 1677, no action should be brought to charge any person upon any agreement made in consideration of marriage, &c. unless such agreement be in writing,”' &c. It was admitted that the promise declared on was ¡ of the same kind with those mentioned in the statute, but the court agreed unanimously, that the statute was
The maxim in Bracton was probably taken from the , civil law, for we find in that system the same principle, that the lawgiver cannot alter his mind to the prejudice ^ of a vested right. Nemo potest muta're consilium suum inalterius injuriavu (Dig. 50. 17. 75.) This maxim of * Papinian is general in its terms; but Dr. Taylor (Ele- ) ments of the Civil Law, 168.) applies it directly as a restriction upon the lawgiver; and a declaration in the Code * leaves no doubt as to the sense of the civil law. Leges et constitutiones' futuris cerium est dare formam negotiis, non ad facta pretérita revocari, nisi nomination, et de pretérito tempore, et adhuc pendentibus negotiis cautuon' sit. (Cod. 1. 14. 7.) This passage, according to the best in- • terpretation of the civilians, relates not merely to future suits, but to future as contradistinguished from past contracts and vested rights. (Perezii Prelec. h. t.) It is, indeed, admitted, that the prince may enact a retrospective law, provided it be done expressly; for the will
Our case is happily very different from that of the subjects of Justinian. With us the power of the lawgiver is limited and defined; the judicial is regarded as a distinct independent power: private rights have been better understood and more exalted in public estimation, as well as secured by provisions dictated by the spirit of freedom, and unknown to the civil law. Our con-» stitutions do not admit the power assumed by the Roman prince; and the principle we are considering j's now to be regarded as sacred. It is not pretended that we have any express constitutional provision on the subject; nor have we any for numerous other rights dear alike to freedom and to justice. A.n ex post facto law, in the strict technical sense of the term, is usually understood to apply to criminal cases, and this is its meaning, when used in the constitution of the United States; yet laws impairing previously acquired civil rights are equally within the reason of that prohibition, and equally to be condemned. We have seen that the
There has not been, perhaps, a distinguished jurist or elementary writer, within the last two centuries, who has had occasion to take notice of retrospective laws, cither civil or criminal, but has mentioned them with caution, distrust, or disapprobation. Numerous au¿ thorities might be cited, but I will select only two, and those no ordinary-namesv Lord Bacon gives more toleration to retrospective, and particularly to declaratory laws, than can now be admitted, under our more precise and accurate distribution and limitation of the powers of government; yet he was,-at the same,time,, duly sensible of their danger and injustice. He confines them to special cases, limits them with solicitude, and speaks of them in general with reproach. Leges qua retrospiciunt raro, et magna cum cautione sunt adhibenda ; ñeque enim placet Janus in Legibus.—Cavendum tamen est, ne convellantur res judicata—Leges declaratorias ne ordinato, nisi in casibus, ubi leges dim justitia retrospicere possint. (De Aug. Scient. Lib. 8. c. 3. Aphor. 47—51.) Puffendorf lays down, without any qualification, a general and pointed condemnation of all such laws; he says, “ a-law can be repealed by the lawgiver, but the rights which have been acquired under it, while it was in force, do not thereby cease. It would be an act of absolute injustice to abolish with a law all the effects which it had produced. Suppose, for example, that there exists a law that the father of a family may dis
The constitution of New Hampshire, established in 1792, has an article, in its bill of rights, that “ retrospect-" ive laws are highly injurious, oppressive, and unjust; and that no such laws should be made, either for the decision of civil causes, or the punishment of offences.” It was also an article in the constitution, established for the French republic, in the year 1795, that no law, criminal or civil, could have a retroactive effect:—“Aucune loi, ni criminelle, ni civile, ne petit avoir d’effet rétroactif.” Even French despotism, atrocious as iris in practice, yields, in its laws, to the authority of such a principle; for the same limitation is laid down as a fundamental truth in the code now in force under the sanction of the French empire. (Code civil des Francais, No. 2.) And as often as the question has been brought before the courts of justice in. this country, they have uniformly said, that the objection to retrospective laws applies as well to those which affect civil rights, as to those which relate to crimes.
In the case of Osborne v. Huger, (l Bay’s Rep. 179.) which came before the supreme court of South Carolina in 1791, the question arose upon a statute relative to the duty of sheriffs as to civil process; the court rejected the- construction of a retrospective operation of the statute, according to its literal meaning; and Judge Burke, in particular, said that he should not be for construing a law so as to devest a right; and that a retrospective law in that sense would be against the constitution of the state. The judges of the supreme court of the United Slates, in the case of Calder v. Bull, (3 Dallas,386.) speak in strong terms of disapprobation of all such laws i and in Ogden v. Blackledge, (2 Cranch, 272.)
This train of authority declaratory of the common and reason of the most civilized states, ancient and modern, on the point before us, is sufficient, as I apprehend, to put it at rest; and to cause not only the judicial, but even the legislative authority to bow with reverence to such a sanction.
It is equally inadmissible to consider the act as declaring how the former statutes were to be construed as to cases already existing. If this interpretation was! to be considered as giving the former acts a new meaning, it then becomes a new rule, and is to have the same effect, as any other newly created statute. But if it be considered as an exposition of the former acts for the information and government of the courts. in the decision of causes before them, it would then be taking cognisance of a judicial question. This could not pos-, sibly have been the meaning of the act, for the power that makes is not the power to construe a law. It is a well settled axiom that the union of these two powers, is tyranny. Theorists and practical statesmen' concur in this opinion. Our government, like all the other free governments upon this continent, and like the only free government, at present, remaining in Europe, consists of departments, and contains a marked separation of the legislative and judicial powers. The constitutions of several of the United States, and among others, those of Massachusetts and Virginia, have an express provision, that the legislative and judicial powers shall be preserved separate and distinct, so that one department shall not exercise the functions belonging to the other. Most pf the models of a free and limited constitution which were produced in Europe, under the impulse ;of the late revolution, and, which had any pretensions to skill or wisdom, and particularly the new constitutions, of Po
For these reasons, I consider that the case before the court ought to be decided precisely as if the act of the • 5th of last April had not been passed. The point then is, whether by the act of 1801 the defendant was liable for the voluntary escape of his prisoner in 1807 from the liberties, notwithstanding the immediate return of the prisoner. If the sheriff had allowed to his prisoner the liberties of the gaol, without taking a bond of indemnity, Jhe might have pleaded a recaption before suit brought. This was so declared in the case of Peters & Gedney v. Henry, (6 Johns. Rep. 121.) and the reason is, that the sheriff, in that case,may restrain the prisoner at his pleasure and deny him the liberties, for he is not bound to give them, until he receives, or is offered, a competent indemnity. And if the prisoner should, at any time, voluntarily go out of the liberties, the sheriff would then, probably, be obliged to confine him in close custody, or be xesponsible thereafter, as for a voluntary escape according to the doctrine in Bonafous v. Walker. (2 Term Rep. 126.) It is stated in this case that the debtor was admitted to the liberties, on giving bail, and the decision in Tillman v. Lansing (4 Johns. Rep. 45.) is, therefore, in
The principles and ground of that decision are so reasonable and just, that they must have met with universal assent from the intelligent part of the community.
The sheriff was bound to give his prisoner the liberties, upon receiving a sufficient bond of indemnity, and when he took the bond he had no further control over the prisoner. He could not prevent him from going at large, nor punish him if he did. The condition of the bond, according to the words of the statute, was, “ that he re - main a true and faithful prisoner, and shall not, at any time, nor in any wise, escape, or go without the limits of the liberties, until discharged by due course of law^” It was proved that the prisoner, in that case, as well as here, did frequently and wilfully go without the limits of the liberties, contrary to the condition of his bond; and if the sheriff was not responsible, because he could show that the prisoner had returned before suit brought, it would - have gond, in a great degree, to have rendered imprisonment illusory, as to all prisoners who were able to tender the sheriff competent security. If the sheriff was not responsible to the creditor, the prisoner was not responsible to the sheriff. Prisoners would have been able to go whenever and wherever they pleased, only taking care to return within the limits before any process was sued out against the sheriff. If the creditor lived remote, it might be months before he had knowledge that his debtor was abroad, despising the coercion of the law $ and when he attempted to prosecute the sheriff, he- might ,find that the debtor had cunningly returned within the limits, and was only waiting a fit occasion to make another escape. A law that could have been fluffed in this
The courts in Massachusetts construe the bonds taken in that state,- for gaol liberties, with the same strictness. In Bartlett v. Willis and others, (3 Tyng, 86.) a bond was given by the prisoner for the gaol limits, conditioned n that he should continue a true prisoner in the custody of the gaoler, and within the limits of the said prison and it was held that the prisoner’s going, in the night time, to a pump for water, which was without the limits, was an escape, and the debt was recovered upon the bond.
The act of the 5th of last April, which allows the sheriff to plead the prisoner’s return before suit, and which does not apply to this case, for the reasons which have been mentioned, does not, however, open the door to the abuses which were met by the decision in the case of Lansing ; for the prisoner’s bond is now assignable to the creditor, and no such plea can be made to the suit upon the bond. The statute only allows it when the
The act of the 28th of March, 1809, which made these bonds assignable, did not affect the former decision, though it wisely provided a more prompt and desirable remedy for the creditor. It was probably passed in consequence of that decision ; for the provisions in the 2d and 3d sections are evidently in affirmance of it. The case of Tillman v. Lancing must, therefore, apply and govern in other cases not coming within the purview of the act of the 5th April, 1810. If the court gave the true exposition of the act of 1801, that exposition must prevail until it ceases to operate, by means of the new statute provision.
I have thus endeavoured to take a full view of every principle that might affect this case, and my opinion is, that the motion for a new trial ought to be denied.
Van opinion. Ness, J. declared himself to be of the same
Motion denied.