| N.C. | Jun 5, 1841

This was a scire facias against Moses Dellinger as bail of one Lawson Henry. Pleas, nul tiel record; surrender of one of the principals, Mary Henry; no capias ad satisfaciendum. One of the questions in this cause was, whether the paper introduced which purported to be a ca. sa. against Lawson Henry alone was a sufficient capias ad satisfaciendum to warrant the proceedings against the bail. A judgment in an action of trespass had been rendered against Lawson Henry and Mary Henry at Fall Term, 1839, at which term the defendant Moses Dellinger, on Wednesday of the same term, brought into court Mary Henry, one of the defendants in the original suit, and surrendered her in discharge of himself as her bail. The following is a copy of the entry, which was all the evidence in the cause upon this question: "Moses Dellinger brought Mary Henry into court and surrendered her to the court in discharge of himself as bail of the said Mary Henry." The defendant's counsel insisted that this entry showed that Mary Henry, a (476) codefendant in the original suit, had been in execution and permitted to go at large by the plaintiff, whereby the defendant was discharged as bail of Lawson Henry as well as of Mary Henry. The defendant's counsel further insisted that the ca. sa. being against Lawson Henry alone, when the judgment was against Lawson and Mary Henry, it was absolutely void, and, therefore, would not support the proceedings against the defendant as bail of the said Lawson. The court charged the jury that if one of two defendants were in execution, and discharged or permitted to go at large by the consent of the plaintiff, it would amount to a discharge of the bail for the other defendant also; but that the entry upon the docket during the term at which the trial took place, "that the defendant Dellinger had surrendered Mary Henry *358 in discharge of himself as her bail," without any evidence that she was ever in execution, would not discharge the defendant Dellinger as bail of the said Lawson Henry. Also the court further instructed the jury that regularly the capias ad satisfaciendum should follow the judgment, and where the judgment was against several defendants the execution should issue against them all, if living; but issuing the execution against one of the defendants, instead of both, as in this case, did not render the execution absolutely void; that it was an irregularity, for which the court, at the instance of the defendant in the execution, might, and probably would, set aside the execution; but still the defendant Dellinger could not in this way avail himself of the irregularity, and that the paper constituted a sufficient ca. sa. to warrant the sci. fa. against the bail. Under this charge the jury found for the plaintiff, and the court adjudged there was such a record. A new trial having been moved for and refused, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff, the defendant appealed to the Supreme Court. The plaintiff sued Lawson Henry and Mary Henry in an action of trespass. Dellinger became bail for each. At the term at which judgment was obtained against both, the bail surrendered Mary Henry, and the same was rendered of record. The plaintiff then did not move the court that she should be committed in execution. As she never had been in execution at the instance of the plaintiff, he of course could not and did not discharge her from execution. The opinion of the judge upon this point of the case, towit, that the bail of Lawson Henry was not discharged, was correct. Secondly, on the trial of the issue made up on the plea "no ca. sa. against the principals," the plaintiff offered in evidence a ca. sa. against Lawson Henry alone. The defendant objected to the evidence, and contended that theca. sa. was void, as it was not as broad as the judgment. The judge, however, was of opinion that the execution was not void, but irregular only, and that the bail on this sci. fa. had no right to take advantage of the irregularity, and that it was sufficient to support the plaintiff's side of the issue. We, after much reflection, are induced to think that the judge erred in admitting this document as a sufficient sa. sa. A writ ofca. sa. against the principal must be sued out and returned non estinventus, before any proceedings can be had against the bail. 1 Bran. and Alder., 212; Petersdorf on Bail, 335; Rev. St., ch. 10, sec. 3. In England, the practice is to direct the ca. sa. to the sheriff of the county where the venue was laid; and the writ must lie, the four last days exclusively *359 before the return, in the sheriff's office. The sheriff's return of (478)non est inventus is a matter of course, without making any attempt to arrest the principal; the ca. sa. being intended merely as a notice to the bail of the plaintiff's intention to proceed against them. 3 Burr., 1360; 1 Arch. Pr., 220. But under our statute the ca. sa. is required as well for the benefit of the bail as of the plaintiff, and theca. sa. ought to be issued to the county where it may be executed by the actual arrest of the defendant, if that can be done. The execution required by our act was intended to be an effectual one. Findley v. Smith,14 N.C. 247" court="N.C." date_filed="1831-12-05" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/finley-v--smith-3661992?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="3661992">14 N.C. 247. It is true that the bail cannot take advantage of any irregularity in the ca. sa., as if it be irregular in its teste or return, or if it be sued after a year and a day from the signing of the judgment. 2 Ld. Ray., 1096; 2 Burr., 1187; 1 Arch. Pr., 320. But if the writ is void, he may show it. In 1 Arch. Pr. K. B., 283, it is said that care must be taken that the writ of execution strictly pursue the judgment, and be warranted by it; otherwise, it is void. Thus, upon a judgment against two (as in this case) you cannot sue out a separate capias against one. Rol. Abr., 888; 6 Term, 523. Nor a capias against one and an elegit against another. Cro. Eliz., 573-4-5; Co., 26-7; 2 Bac. Abr. (Execution) G.; 2 Hob., 2-59; Cro. Car., 75. If, as we have seen, thecapias is here intended for the benefit of the bail, as well as the plaintiff, a writ of that kind against one only of two defendants might deprive the bail of important benefits; for if the capias had issued against both, strictly in pursuance of the judgment, the other defendant might have been forced to discharge the judgment, and then the bail would have been relieved. We are of the opinion that the capias against Lawson Henry upon a joint judgment obtained in an action of trespass against Mary Henry and Lawson Henry is void as to the bail.

PER CURIAM. New trial.

Cited: Jackson v. Hampton, 32 N.C. 592; Blue v. Blue, 79 N.C. 73.

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