Leigh v. Alpaugh

24 N.J.L. 629 | N.J. | 1854

Potts, J.

In this case a capias ad respondendum was sued out by Alpaugh against Leigh, tested the first Tuesday in •June last, and made returnable on tho third Tuesday in August thereafter, upon which the defendant was arrested, and *630executed a bail bond to the sheriff. On the return day of the capias he entered, into recognizance of special bail, and perfected an appearance in form. On the twenty-fourth of August the plaintiff filed his declaration, and on the eighteenth of September the defendant filed his plea of the general issue with the usual affidavit. And now,t this being the first term of this court since the issuing of the writ, the defendant moves to quash the said writ on the ground that the same is void, not being made returnable in term time.

There is no authority for making a capias ad respondendum returnable in vacation. The acts of eighteen hundred and fifty-two and eighteen hundred and fifty-four do not apply to writs of this character, and it has been frequently held that a writ returnable on a dies non is a void writ and cannot be amended. Kenworthy v. Peppiat, 4 Barn. & Ald. 288; Halliday v. Cooper, 3 Missouri R. 286; Sanders v. Raines et al. 10 Missouri 772; Bell v. Austin, 13 Pick. 90; Brown v. Simpson, 3 Stewart 331; Shirley v. Huger, 3 Blackford 225.

And the rule was held to be the same if the capias be tested out of term, in Chanden v. Brecknell, 4 Cowen 49.

In Park v. Heath, however, the Supreme Court of New York held that now, by statute, this may be amended. But if the capias is returnable out of term it is void, and cannot be amended. 15 Wendell 301.

The capias being therefore void, and the arrest illegal, the recognizance of special bail is of no validity. The only question is whether after plea filed, the defendant is entitled to have the writ quashed, or merely to have the recognizance discharged on entering common bail.

He might probably have been relieved from the arrest by habeas corpus. But it cannot be objected that he chose to relieve himself by giving bail to the sheriff. As no recovery could have been had upon the bond to the sheriff, he was not obliged to put in special bail; but having done so out of abundant caution, there was still no necessity for his pleading. A judgment by default against him would have been set aside on motion. But by pleading, he voluntarily *631comes into court and takes issue to the narr. He does this to save a default.

It has been held that after issue joined upon a demurrer,, it is not too late to move to strike out the demurrer as frivolous. Allen v. Wheeler, 1 Zab. 97. That after replication and demurrer the plaintiff may move to strike out the plea as false. Corbet v. Powell, 5 Barn. & Ald. 750; Brewster v. Hall, 6 Cowen 34; and see Hogencamp v. Ackerson, 4 Zab. 136. These cases seem to settle the principle that a party does not always lose absolutely his right to take advantage of an error of his adversary by pleading over, if he makes his motion at the earliest opportunity. And in the case of Halliday v. Cooper, the capias was quashed after the defendant had pleaded.

I think upon the whole, that inasmuch as the writ is. clearly void, and the defendant has not been brought into court by legal process, as he filed his plea before the end ef the vacation out of abundant caution to save a default, and now moves to quash at his earliest opportunity, that the motion must prevail; but upon the usual terms, that he file a stipulation not to bring suit for false imprisonment.

Ogden, J., concurred.
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