6 Ga. 575 | Ga. | 1849
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
After being imprisoned one hundred and sixty-five days, Stephens was discharged from imprisonment by the judgment of the Superior Court, on the ground of his being bona fide insolvent. Was the late Sheriff, Stephens, imprisoned for a criminal offence against the public laws of the State, or was he imprisoned to enforce a civil remedy ? If he was imprisoned for a criminal of-fence, and was insolvent, then the County was hound to pay the cost, and the judgment of the Court below was right; but if the imprisonment of Stephens was not for a criminal offence, and intended merely to enforce a civil right for the benefit, of Breedlove, the plaintiff in execution, and made at his instance, then the County is not liablfe to pay the costs of the imprisonment. The construction which we give to the term “ prisoners,” as used in the Acts of 1792 and 1801 is, that such prisoners only as are confined in jail on a criminal charge are intended to he “ dieted” at the expense of the public. Prince, 263, 264.
We have not been able to bring our minds to the conclusion that Stephens was imprisoned for a crime. The 50th section of the Judiciary Act of 1799, declares, that “ the Sheriff shall be liable, either to an action on the case, or an attachment for contempt of Court, at the option of the party, whenever it shall appear that he hath injured such party, either by false returns or by neglecting to arrest the defendant, or to levy on his property, or to pay over to the plaintiff or his attorney the amount of any sales wliich shall he made under or by virtue of any execution, or
The attachment recites, that the rule absolute was granted against Stephens at the instance of Breedlove, the plaintiff in execution, and he is ordered to be imprisoned until he pays over to the plaintiff the principal, interest and cost due on said fi.fa. In whatever light the proceeding against the Sheriff for contempt may have been viewed at Common Law, we think our Statute clearly points it out as a remedy which the party injured by the Sheriff may pursue against him, at his option, for his ownyrn'vate advantage ; and when the Sheriff is imprisoned under the order of the Court, at the instance of the injured party, for his private advantage and redress, we cannot consider him as imprisoned for a crime against the people of the State, for which any portion of them may be taxed to defray the expenses of such imprisonment.
The party injured by the conduct of the Sheriff, and at whose instance the remedy given by the Statute is sought to be enforced, for his individual benefit and redress, should, in our judgment, pay the costs of the imprisonment.
Ye concede the power of the Court to punish the Sheriff for contempt of Court by imprisonment, independent of any action for that purpose by the injured party for his own benefit.
Whether, on motion of the Solicitor General, acting in behalf of the people of the State, the Court should feel it to be its duty to imprison the Sheriff for a contempt of Court, in disobeying its process, the County would not be liable for the costs of his imprisonment, it is not now necessary to decide; but that, in our judgment, would present a very different case than the one made by this record, taking into view the provision of the Statute of 1799. In ex parte Thurmond, (1 Bailey’s Rep. 605,) it was held, that an attachment against a Sheriff for contempt in neglecting to collect money under execution, or to to pay it over when collected, is merely a civil process, so far as its object is to redress the injury of the party who procures it to be issued; but so far as it is designed to punish the Sheriff for neglect of his official duty, it is
Let the judgment of the Court below be reversed.