34 Ga. 101 | Ga. | 1864
The only question made by this record, is whether the signing and certifying a bill of exceptions to this Court, upon the judgments of the Superior Court, in habeas corpus trials, operate as a supersedeas — so as to continue the applicant discharged from the arrest or custody of which he complains, until the hearing and adjudication of the case before this Court, in those cases where the relator is remanded by the judgment of the Court below, back into custody.
We are clear that the bill of exceptions, in these cases, does not operate as a supersedeas. It can only have that operation in those cases, and in the manner provided for es pecially by the statute.
“ The bill of exceptions thus filed, shall operate as a supersedeas upon the plaintiff in error complying with the following terms: In a civil cause, the party shall, on or before filing -the bill of exceptions, pay all costs, and by himself, his agent or attorney in fact or at law, give bond with good security, payable to the oppost-ie party, and conditioned for the payment of the eventual condemnation money and all subsequent costs, which bond shall be attested and. approved by the said clerk. Or he may file an affidavit with the said clerk, stating that he is unable, from his poverty, to pay the costs and give the security for the eventual condemnation money, and that his counsel has advised him that he has good cause for a writ of error, which affidavit shall operate as if the costs were paid and bond given. In a criminal cause, where the offence is bailable, the defendant shall enter into a recognizance before the said clerk, with security to be approved by him, in a sum to be fixed by the presiding Judge, conditioned for the personal appearance of such defendant, to abide the final order, judgment or sentence of
These are the only cases in which the bill of exceptions operates as a supersedeas. In civil cases, where the costs are paid, and a bond with security given for the eventual condemnation money ; and in criminal cases where the offence is bailable, upon like terms, except that the bond is given for a sum fixed by the Judge, and when not bailable, by the order of the Judge; and when the party cannot give the bond from his poverty, then the Judge orders the supersedeas, but the defendant is not set at liberty.
This case does not fall within any of these provisions. It is a civil proceeding, but there is no eventual condemnation money, and no bond can be given to protect it. It is not a criminal cause, yet the personal presence of the party suing out the writ is required, and must be secured, before he is discharged upon the filing of the bill of exceptions, else injustice may be done to the service by the loss of a soldier. Ho bond is authorized to be given so as to compel his attendance to abide the final order, j udgment, or sentence of the Court, and yet that attendance is necessary ; nor could the Court require a bond to be given, for there is no one authorized to collect or to recover the money in case of its forfeiture; besides, money would not compensate the loss to the service of the soldier. The case is not provided for by the letter of the statute, and by the enumeration of the particular cases in which a supersedeas is allowed, all others are excluded; nor is the case within the spirit of the law, for the reasons I have already given.
Until the Legislature thinks proper to supply this omission, the condition of an applicant must remain as it is placed by the judgment of the Court below, on the merits