28 N.Y. 318 | NY | 1863
The objection, that the complaint does not show that an execution on the judgment against Boylan was *320 issued, or returned, or that any order for his examination, or for the attachment, was made, is not available to the defendants in an action on the bond. The liability of the principal to arrest, is conceded by the bail, by entering into the bond. If there was any irregularity in the process upon which the arrest was made, it belonged to the principal alone to set it up; it was in his power to waive it, and the giving of bail to obtain his discharge is evidence that he did so. (Stever v. Somberger, 19 Wend. 121; S.C., 24 id. 275; Gregory v. Levy, 12 Barb. 610; S.C., 7 How. Pr. Rep. 37.)
The attachment should, I think, have been made returnable before the judge by whom it was issued. (Code, § 302; Shepherd v. Dean, 13 How. Pr. R. 173; S.C. 3 Abb. 424; Dresser v.Van Pelt, 15 How. Pr. R. 19.) But if it was irregular in this respect, it was voidable only, and not void, and therefore amendable. (Parke v. Health, 15 Wend. 301; Code, §§ 173, 174, 176.) The defect, if any there were, was therefore waived by giving the bond; or at all events it was so far waived that it can not be made available as a defense to an action on the bond.
The only question which raises any doubt as to the correctness of the judgment, is that arising out of the want of seals to the instrument on which the action is founded. Although the code of procedure authorizes judges, before whom proceedings supplementary to execution are had, to punish parties or witnesses, for disobedience to his lawful orders, as for contempt, (Code, § 302,) yet the proceedings, in effecting such punishment, must be governed by the provisions of the revised statutes. (2 R.S. 534, vol. 3, 5th ed. p. 849.) The sheriff is therefore authorized to discharge the party arrested upon an attachment in such cases, only upon receiving the bond of the party attached, with two sufficient sureties in the penalty indorsed on the attachment, with the condition that the defendant will appear on the return of the attachment and abide the order and judgment of the court thereupon. (2 R.S. 537, § 13.) It is elsewhere *321
provided that "No sheriff or other officer shall take any bond, obligation or security, by color of his office, in any other case or manner than such as are provided by law; and any such bond, obligation or security, taken otherwise than as herein directed, shall be void." (2 R.S. 286, § 59.) This statute, which is in substance the same as that of 23 Hen. 6, ch. 10; (8 John. 100; 10 Co. 99 a,) was designed to protect defendants from oppression, and plaintiffs from the consequences of the disposition of officers to be indulgent to parties under arrest. (Winter v.Kinney, 1 Comst. 368.) It should have a reasonable construction, in order that it may effect the object aimed at by the legislature. The present case is not within the object of its prohibition, if it is within the letter. I think the expression"by color of his office, in any other case or manner than such as are provided by law," limits the penalty of the statute to cases where it is shown, or must be presumed from the circumstances, that the officer designedly departed from the statute. In Decker v. Judson, (
The instrument on its face shows a sufficient consideration to make it binding upon the parties as a simple contract.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Upon consultation the court concurred in the foregoing opinion; but it was also held that where the appellant failed either to appear when his cause is reached, or afterwards to submit points in accordance with the 25th rule, the judgment below should be affirmed of course, and on that ground as well as on an examination of the merits, the judgment in this case should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *324