20 F. Cas. 721 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania | 1823
The court is of opinion that the debt for which this action is brought was contracted in this state. The responsibility of the defendant for the amount of the sales of the goods consigned to him by the plaintiff, and his implied, as well as his express understanding to pay it, were made in this state. The note which I have of the case of Webster v. Massy [Case No. 17,336], the first which occurred in this court of a motion to enter an exoneretur in a case precisely like the present, which was denied, is very imperfect. The same question, however, came afterwards before the court in the case of Read v. Chapman [Id. 11,605], when the case of Webster v. Massy [supra], was overruled, and the defendant was permitted to appear on common bail, upon the ground of a discharge under the insolvent law of this state, where the debt was contracted. The rule laid down in that case has ever since governed the decisions of this court in similar cases, and must govern them in the present There is no substantial difference in respect to the question before the court, whether the defendant applies to appear on common bail, or to have an exon-eretur entered on the bail piece, where special bail has been entered. The ground upon which the application is made and granted in both eases is,, that the person of the defendant, being legally discharged, the court will not require him to give special bail, or if he has done so, will discharge the bail, since they may relieve themselves by surrendering the defendant into custody. The case of Bobyshall v. Oppenheimer [Case No. 1,589], which the plaintiff’s counsel supposed was an authority in opposition to this rule, is altogether unlike the present It was decided in that case, that after the forfeiture and assignment of the bail bond, a subsequent discharge of the defendant as an insolvent cannot affect the plaintiff’s right against the bail, and that in such a case, the court would not direct an exoneretur to be entered. By refusing to do so, the defendant could not be deprived of the privilege of the discharge of his person, since he could not be surrendered by the appearance bail. In looking over the note I have of the opinion given in that case, I observe that it is intimated, that where the special bail surrenders his principal, who has been duly discharged as an insolvent, the