6 Cal. 57 | Cal. | 1856
Mr. Justice Terry concurred.
This was an action in the Court below upon a bail bond. Several questions are raised by the record which I propose briefly to examine, with no expectation, however, of reconciling the apparent contradictions of the statute, which have hitherto been a stumbling block to the profession, and defied judicial exposition.
The first point is, as to the sufficiency of the affidavit, and whether the bail can take advantage of any informality or defect in it.
An examination satisfies my mind that the affidavit, on which the order of arrest was issued, is sufficient, and this would dispose of the point, were it not desirable that some rule should be established to govern future cases.
Whatever doubt may have heretofore existed in the minds of this Court or the bar, we are satisfied, upon the weight of authority, that this defence cannot be set up by third parties, and not even by the defendant himself after judgment. By putting in bail and neglecting to move to be discharged, he consents to process and waives all irregularities in this respect. 1 East., 81; 6 Taunton, 185; 10 Bingham, 506; 24 Wend., 275; and 19 Wend., 122.
The next question is how and when the bail becomes charged. The obligation of the bond is, that “the defendant shall at all times render himself amenable to the process of the Court during the pendency of the action, and to such as may be issued to enforce the judgment therein, or that they will pay to the plaintiff the amount of any judgment that may be recovered in the action.” In ordinary cases, the defendants would only be bound by the conditions of the bond, but the principle is now familiar, that where parties contract in respect to a law, the law itself becomes a part of the contract, and they are bound thereby; Russell v. Elliott, 2 Cal., 245; so that the whole statute must be examined to determine the defendants’ liability.
From the conditions of the bond, it would seem that some final pro
It is difficult to reconcile the provisions of these sections upon any other hypothesis than that the Legislature have omitted, through inadvertence, to provide for final process in these cases; and it is a singular anomaly that bail should be charged, who have undertaken that the defendant will render himself amenable to the process of the Court, when the fact is admitted that no process has issued, and that the debtor has at all times been within its reach.
I come now to the point, whether the judgment should not state the fraud affirmatively; in other words, fraud being the gravamen of the whole proceeding, whether it should not be found, before the debtor can can be imprisoned or the bail charged. It appears that there can be but two judgments, one against the' person, and the other against the property; in the former of which, the execution issues, directing the officer to arrest and confine the party until the debt be paid. In order, then, to determine whether the party can be imprisoned, we must look to the judgment, which in this case is a simple money judgment. The Constitution of California prohibits imprisonment for debt except in cases of fraud; consequently every intendment must be in favor of the liberty of the subject, and his right to trial by jury, which is likewise secured.
It is said that the District Courts have jurisdiction over the subject of frauds, and it must be presumed, when its process issues, that it has been issued in a proper case. The liberty of the citizen is not to be presumed away in any such manner; and, adopting this rule of presumption, there is not a single case in which a party might not be arrested and imprisoned on final process, although fraud never entered into the elements of the original suit or controversy. Is the mere arrest conclusive of fraud ? The party may be relieved from it by deposit or bail, or by moving upon affidavit to be discharged before justification of the bail. Suppose the Court should refuse to discharge, what then is his remedy; is he concluded by this left-handed proceeding in a matter which affects honor and liberty as well as property? A party is arrested : he gives bail to prevent going to prison, and because the Court refuses to discharge him before judgment, or he neglects to apply for such discharge, he is said to have waived all right and confessed the 'fraud. This would be a dangerous implication, and one which should not be tolerated by this Court, particularly after its repeated decisions that constitutional rights cannot be waived by mere implication. Fraud is a fact which must be proved; the party undertakes to do so when he sues out his process; it gives character to his judgment, and determines his
My conclusions are, that the writ of arrest is only an intermediate remedy or process to secure the presence of the party until final judgment, and that the facts on which it is based must be affirmatively found, and the fraud stated in the judgment, in order to authorize an arrest on final process. That inasmuch as this was not done in the present ease, no ca. sa. could have properly issued against the judgment debtor; and that the law will not charge the bail for neglecting to do a vain act, as it is apparent, if they had surrendered him, the sheriff would have had no authority to detain him.
I am aware that in announcing this opinion I shall not meet with the full concurrence of the bar, but 1 can come to no other conclusion. The difficulties grow out of the statute, which would seem to to have been enacted by a Legislature much resembling the “parliamentvm indoctum,” or lack-learning parliament, of which Lord Coke speaks with so much spleen. We may congratulate the country that this same want of professional knowledge does not now exist, and that our present legislators, so profoundly learned and deeply skilled in the arcana of the law, even beyond the experience of barristers and judges, will readily ascertain and remedy the defect by change of the organic law, or in some other way. It remains but to add that judgment is reversed.