12 Colo. App. 271 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1898
This was an action in the name of the people to recover on a forfeited recognizance in a criminal case. Harry C. Hus
The determination of the controversy turns upon the construction of General Statutes, sec. 969, which reads as follows : “ In all cases of bail for the appearance of any person or persons charged with any criminal offense, the security or securities of such person or persons may at any time before judgment is rendered upon scire facias to show cause why execution should not issue against such security or securities, seize and surrender such person or persons charged as aforesaid, to the sheriff of the county wherein the recognizance shall be taken, and it shall be the duty of such sheriff on such surrender and the delivery to him of a certified copy of the recognizance by which such security or securities are bound, to take such person or persons so charged as aforesaid into custody, and by writing acknowledge such surrender, and thereupon the security or securities shall be discharged from any such recognizance upon payment of all costs occasioned thereby.” It is somewhat difficult to determine upon what basis or theory the judgment was rendered. Counsel for the people contend that all of the costs and expenses of the extradition are properly chargeable as costs against the sureties on these three several bonds, entered into for the appearance of Huston at the district court, and as this alone amounted to |736.*30, the judgment should be sustained on that account.
The statute says positively that if before judgment is rendered upon the scire facias, the sureties deliver to the sheriff the body of the absconding principal, and make payment of the costs incurred in the proceeding, — that is, primarily the costs incurred in the forfeiture and the issuance of scire facias thereon, — they shall be exonerated and discharged from the recognizance. It cannot be read into the statute that under any circumstances are they liable to pay any costs incurred under any information or indictment except in those in which they have entered into recognizances. In this case, if the officer
Counsel for the people contend, however, that there was no such delivery to the sheriff as is required by the statute. The accused was on the 14th of December in the custody of the sheriff in the county jail, the place where the statute said' he should be in order to entitle the sureties to be discharged. What more, then, could the sureties do than make a formal surrender ? They had no authority to take him out of jail and deliver him back to the sheriff, even if such an idle and useless ceremony should have been necessary. Moreover, the prisoner was in custody by the act of the state itself, and it certainly cannot be contended that sureties could be deprived of their right to be exonerated by the power which was seeking to inforce the forfeiture. In Buffington v. Smith, 58 Ga. 341, it was held that where the state held the principal in her penitentiary, she could not forfeit the bond of the sureties to produce his body to answer another indictment, for the obvious reason that she alone could produce Mm and try him, if she wished to do so. In West v. Colquitt, 71 Ga. 559, it was said, “ Of course if the state already has the, man in her power, she cannot make another produce him, nor can she with any sort of justice make that other pay her for not doing what she can'easily do, but the other cannot do at all.”
The views here announced are not in conflict with, but rather in accord with, the leading case of Taylor v. Taintor, 16 Wall. (U. S.) 367. In that, it was said, “The law which renders the performance impossible and therefore excuses failure, must be a law operative in the state where the obligation was assumed, and obligatory in its effect upon her authorities.” In the case at bar, it was the state of Colorado which reincarcerated Huston upon another charge, and held him in custody, thereby preventing the sureties in this case from a surrender of their principal in any other manner than that in which it was done. Neither do the views conflict with those expressed by this court in Ayers v. The People, etc., 3 Colo. App. 117. The facts are entirely different and do not bring the case within the rule there laid down. There 'is no pretense that the officer in this case went under the employment of the sureties, or that the proceedings to secure the return of the principal in the bond were had at their instance or request. We do not go to the extent of saying that in no case can the state recover the costs of the arrest and return to custody of the absconding principal in a bail bond, but we do say that such recovery cannot be had under circumstances like those here presented, when it appears that the authorities of the state elected to incur these costs upon an information entirely distinct and separate from those in which the recognizances had been given.
We feel less hesitancy in declaring the judgment erroneous upon the grounds recited in view of the fact that there is enough in the record and pleadings to strongly, if not conclusively, make it evident that the bonds in this case were void. There is an allegation that on June 30, the preliminary examination was had, and that in pursuance of an order then and there made, these bonds were given, but of date September 4. There is no specific allegation that the justice
The judgment will be reversed.
Reversed.