153 P. 784 | Or. | 1915
In Banc.
delivered the opinion of the court.
“Every person confined in jail on an execution issued on a judgment recovered in an action wherein the defendant is liable to be arrested, may be discharged therefrom at the end of ten days from his first confinement, upon the conditions hereinafter specified”: Section 4544, L. O. L. After a required notice has been given, the Code specifies that the person shall be taken before the jndge, who shall examine him on oath concerning his estate and effects and the disposal thereof, and his ability to pay the judgment for which he is committed, and shall also hear any other legal or pertinent evidence that may be produced by either party. It is further prescribed in Section 4549, L. O. L., that if the judge upon such examination shall be satisfied that the prisoner has no real or personal property conveyed, concealed or in any way disposed of with a design to secure the same to his own use, or to defraud his creditors, he shall administer to him an oath, the form of which is laid down, and grant him a certificate of discharge, upon receipt of which the jailer shall let the judgment debtor go, unless he is detained for some other cause. On appeal the defend
The decision of the circuit judge is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to administer to the defendant the oath formulated in Section 4549, L. O. L., and to grant him the certificate of discharge described in Section 4550, L. O. L.
Reversed With Directions.