289 S.W. 741 | Tex. App. | 1926
In this case, while the trial court concluded, correctly we think, that the sheriff was without authority to accept money in lieu of a bail bond, he thought appellant was not entitled to recover back the money deposited, because, he concluded, the judgment forfeiting the money to the state, until set aside in a direct proceeding for the purpose, was conclusive of the right of the state to the forfeiture, and because, he concluded further, appellant was a party to the unlawful act of the sheriff in accepting money in lieu of a bail bond and releasing him from custody.
We think the judgment is supportable on the last-mentioned one of the two grounds, and will not determine whether it is also supportable on the other one or not.
It was the sheriff's duty to hold appellant in jail until he was lawfully ordered to discharge him, unless appellant in the meantime furnished a bail bond as required by law. Articles 42, 269, 273, C. C. P. of 1925; Luckey v. State,
In the case cited, the accused, Sauskelonis, having been released by the officer on a deposit of money in lieu of a bond, sued to recover back the money. In affirming a judgment denying Sauskelonis relief the Connecticut Supreme Court of Error said:
"He [quoting] must be presumed to have known the law, and known that the taking of the cash bail in this manner was illegal."
It is settled law that a plaintiff cannot obtain relief in a case in which he "must necessarily disclose an illegal purpose as the groundwork of his claim." 13 C.J. 492, and authorities there cited. The principle applies in this case because the basis of appellant's claim of a right to recover back the $1,000 he deposited with the sheriff is the illegality of the act of the sheriff in accepting the money and setting him at liberty. State v. Scanlon.
In the Scanlon Case, the Appellate Court of Indiana, after discussing other cases, said: *743
"In the ease before us it was the prisoner himself who deposited the money. If the act was an illegal one, and one by which he wrongfully and illegally procured his discharge, he was himself a party to such wrongful act, and could never be heard to say that on account of this very illegality he is entitled to recover back the money by means of which he secured his discharge."
The plaintiff in the Bryant Case sought to recover money he deposited without authority of law, whereby he procured the release of certain persons charged with crime and lawfully in the custody of an officer. In affirming a judgment denying the plaintiff a recovery, the Supreme Court of Arizona said:
"That the transaction was illegal, there can be no doubt. The sergeant had no authority to fix bail. To release the accused without bail being properly fixed was a positive breach of duty. But it does not follow that the plaintiff is entitled to recover. Putting aside the question whether the proper parties plaintiff are not the accused persons, * * * we find that the plaintiff is seeking to recover moneys deposited in an illegal transaction which has been fully executed. He sought the enlargement of the accused, and accomplished that purpose by depositing $300 upon the understanding that it should be considered as bail for the appearance of the accused on the following Monday. Having accomplished his purpose, and the money being forfeited, as he agreed it might be if the accused failed to appear at the time stated [as they did], it seems to us that he is in pari delicto with the police sergeant, and in no position to complain."
In the Sauskelonis Case, already quoted from above, the court, after holding that the acceptance by the officer of cash bail was unauthorized, said:
"But it does not follow that the plaintiff can recover the cash bail he deposited upon his own request in order to obtain his release from a just confinement upon a lawful arrest. The plaintiff requested the sergeant to do an unlawful act, to fix his bail and release him from confinement, when the sergeant was without authority to do either. The sergeant complied with the unlawful request, and in violation of law released the plaintiff and thereby obstructed justice. Both plaintiff and sergeant have participated in an illegal act. The law presumes the plaintiff knew that he was soliciting and engaged in an unlawful act. The giving of the cash bail was the moving consideration for the unlawful release."
Appellant cites Butler v. Foster,
In the Butler Case it appeared that the clerk of a circuit court, without authority to do so, had liberated a person in custody charged with a crime, on the deposit with him by such person of a sum of money as security for his appearance to answer the charge against him. The suit was by the county treasurer as such against the clerk to recover the money so deposited. The clerk having no authority as such to receive the money and admit the accused to bail, the Supreme Court of Alabama held that neither the county nor the state had any claim on the money deposited with the clerk, and that the county treasurer therefore was not entitled to recover it.
In the Applegate Case, the plaintiff, being in custody charged with a crime, was liberated by a justice of the peace, with whom the plaintiff deposited money in lieu of a bond. In reversing a judgment denying a right the plaintiff claimed to recover back the money, the Supreme Court of Kansas said the justice of the peace —
"having taken and retained the money without authority, it must be treated as the property of Applegate [the plaíntiff], and therefore he was entitled to recover the same."
In the Snyder Case a similar ruling was made on facts not materially different, on the authority of the Butler and Applegate Cases. The McNamara and Eagan Cases, in which like rulings were made, were not unlike the other cases in any important particular, it seems.
The plaintiff in the Brasfield Case sought to recover back money he deposited with a city marshal in lieu of a bail bond to secure the release of his brother charged with a crime and in the custody of the officer. The city marshal was not authorized to accept money in lieu of a bond; and the court, on the authority of the Butler, Applegate, Snyder, McNamara and Eagan Cases, mentioned above, held the plaintiff was entitled to recover back the money, saying:
"The acceptance of the money and the subsequent proceedings of the municipal authorities with reference thereto were without any justification in law, were beyond the power of such authorities, and conferred no title to this money upon the city. The city could acquire no valid claim to the money by such proceedings. Therefore the money so deposited by complainant may be recovered by him in this suit."
In each of the cases relied upon by appellant and mentioned above, the conclusion of the court deciding it appears to have been reached without reference to the principle invoked by the courts deciding the Sauskelonis, Scanlon, and Bryant cases and cases like them, hereinbefore cited as supporting the ruling of the trial court in the instant cases. We regard the principle as controlling in such cases, and therefore are unwilling to follow cases ignoring it. When a *744 person charged with an offense against the laws of this state and held in jail in default of a bond to secure his appearance before the proper court to answer the charge against him, induces an officer to accept money in lieu of such a bond and to unlawfully liberate him, and afterwards fails to appear and answer such charge, we think such person should not be permitted to maintain a suit and thereby recover back the money so paid by him, on the ground that the act of the officer in accepting the deposit was unlawful.
The judgment is affirmed.