104 Ala. 93 | Ala. | 1893
Petitioner was committed to jail on December 13th, 1893, on preliminary examination before the Probate Judge of Marshall county, to answer the charge of grand larceny, and has since remained and is now in custody under that commitment. The circuit court of Marshall county convened in regular session next after said commitment on April 4th, 1894, and immediately adjourned to Monday, the 16th day of April, 1894, and convened on said day, and was in session on that and the succeeding day, when it adjourned sine die for the term. It appears that this term was held only for the purpose of entering up judgments by default, and that no other business was done. No grand jury was organized, and, of course, no investigation of the charge against the petitioner was. had. Not only so, but the cause of the State against him for the offense for which he was committed was not stated or entered in any way on any docket or record of- the circuit court, and no order of continuance, for further investigation, or other purpose,.was.entered or made in his case, nor was the’prisoner'brought- before the court for any purpose
It is clear on principle that the rights of a party committed to, and, in default of bail, confined in jail to answer an indictment to be thereafter preferred against him, are precisely the same as those of a party under bond to appear and answer an indictment thereafter to be preferred, in respect of enlargement or discharge, the one from jail and the other from the restraint of the bond, on account of any lapse, chasm or discontinuance of the prosecutions against them, severally, since each is alike in custody, the one in that of the sheriff and the other in that of his bail, for the same purpose and to the same end. — 2 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, p. 1; Cooper v. State, 32 Am. Rep. 571; Gay v. State, 20 Tex. 507.
In respect of a party on bail, it was decided by this court in Rogers v. State, 79 Ala 59, that “where a person is bound over to appear at the next term of the circuit court, and from term to term thereafter until discharged by law, to answer for an offense with which he is charged on preliminary examination before a magistrate ; if no indictment is found against him at that term of the court, no forfeiture taken, and the case not continued for further investigation, the prosecution is discontinued and the sureties on the recognizance are discharged.”- This case followed the early one of Goodwin v. The Governor, 1 Stew & Port. 465, and is virtually approved in State to use &c. v. Kyle, 99 Ala. 256. As is stated in the body of the opinion, there are authorities opposed to the view reached in this case of Rogers v. State; and at least a plausible argument against it is predicable on the statutory form of bail bonds whereby the sureties are bound for the appearance of the defendant at the next term of the court ‘ ‘ and from term to term thereafter until discharged by law,” and on the .'statute
When a cause is discontinued, of course that cause is ended ; it no longer exists. In a criminal case, there is no longer a pending prosecution upon which the defendant may be held, and he must be discharged. The discharge thereby of the sureties on a recognizance, puts an end to their duty to produce the defendant. Resting under no duty to produce him, their custody of him, which was merely to serve this duty, is also at an end, and he is discharged therefrom. So that while Rogers’ Case, and the others referred to, dealt only with the liability of sureties on bail pieces, they are equally y>f authority in respect of defendants confined in jail, to the effect that they also are discharged.
Applying, as we must, the principle of those cases to the case at bar the result must be the enlargement of the petitioner. A term of the court was held, and no action whatever was taken in his case. It does not appear even that a general order of continuance was made ; and conceding that we might presume that order to have been made, it would avail nothing here since this case nowhere appeared or had ever been entered on the dockets or records of the court, and would not have been reached by such order. It was pending by virtue of the commitment until the court should meet and at'its-first term take cognizance of it in some way. Having met and adjourned without any action upon it, the force of the mittimus was exhausted; ibw&s functus officio. The circuit court not having taken hold of the prosecu
Habeas corpus granted, aud petitioner discharged.