27 A.2d 114 | Vt. | 1942
On July 23, 1938, the relator was committed to Rutland County jail upon a certified execution issued upon a judgment rendered in a tort action by Rutland County Court. On October 28, 1938, upon hearing duly held, a superior judge ordered that the close jail certificate indorsed upon the execution be vacated forthwith, and that the relator should forthwith be entitled to the benefit of the laws relating to the discharge of poor debtors, or the laws relating to admission to the liberties of the jail yard, as if the execution upon which he was committed had issued without any certificate thereon. On October 31, 1938, the relator applied to one of the commissioners of jail delivery to be allowed to take the poor debtor's oath, whereupon a citation was issued and served and a hearing had by the commissioners pursuant to the statute, and on November 30, 1938, the application was denied. Thereafter a petition for a writ of mandamus to be directed to such commissioners commanding them to admit the relator to the poor debtor's oath and to deliver to him two certificates thereof was brought to this Court. See
This is a second petition for a writ of Mandamus to be directed to the commissioners commanding them to admit the relator to the poor debtor's oath and to deliver to him two certificates thereof, and the foregoing facts are set forth therein. As before, though duly summoned and ordered to answer the commissioners have not appeared or answered, and by their failure so to do have directly admitted all traversable allegations of the petition. The attorney of the judgment creditor was notified and has appeared and opposed the granting of the petition.
Cannon Warren v. Norton,
The judgment creditor calls attention to the order vacating the close jail certificate and claims that P.L. 2226 directs the court or superior judge to determine the privilege of the poor debtor's oath or the liberties of the jail yard in the alternative, and that relator has made an election. The provisions of the statute mean that, when a close jail certificate is vacated, the execution on which the prisoner is confined in jail is reduced to any *441
ordinary body execution, and he is held in jail under the execution as though the certificate had not been indorsed thereon. In re Blake,
It follows that the relator has a clear legal right to be admitted to the poor debtor's oath. A writ of mandamus is a proper remedy to compel obedience to the peremptory terms of the statute under the circumstances. In the Matter of Savage,
Let a writ of mandamus issue commanding the Commissioners ofJail Delivery for the County of Rutland forthwith to admit therelator to the poor debtor's oath and to deliver to him twocertificates thereof, in accordance with the provisions of P.L.2216. Let the relator recover his costs.