9 Ala. 434 | Ala. | 1846
The question presented is, whether the surety to writ of error bond, must be a citizen of the State? This depends upon the proper construction of our statutes. The act of 1820, (Clay’s Dig. 307, § 6,) provides, that no judgment shall be suspended, by a writ of error, “ unless the party applying for it, shall execute in the clerk’s office a bond wtth sufficient security, conditioned,” &c. The act of 1822, (Ib. § 7,) makes the clerk responsible for taking insufficient security, but permits him to defend himself by showing, that the person he took as security, “ was generally reputed sufficient for„the sum for which he was bound, at the time he was taken as security.” The act of 1826, (Ib. 310, § 26, requires the Supreme Court, upon the affirmance of a judg
Although this matter is not free from difficulty, we think it must be presumed, that the legislature had in view our own citizens, in the enactment. Foreigners, it is true, may have property in this State, to answer the execution which may be issued on the affirmed judgment; but the property of foreigners must be admitted to be more transitory, more unstable, and more liable to be removed, than that of our own citizens. Again, there is one execution, a ¡ca. sa. which the judgment creditor would be deprived of, in the case of a nonresident, and although this writ has been by a recent statute rendered less valuable, as a means of coercing payment, it is still in force, and may be the only means of obtaining payment. This statute, however, should be construed by the law as it existed when it was passed, and then the right to sue out a ca. sa. existed in all its rigor, as a common law writ of execution.
Again, the clerk is allowed to justify, by proving that the surety was generally reputed good for the amount for which he was bound, when he received him. How could thi; be applied with any certainty to a non-resident ? Hq it be known, what debts he might owe at the pla< residence ? And yet it is only by this knowledge solvency of any one can be known. It is true, that resident citizens may obtain a false credit, by the possession of pro-,, perty, owing at the same time debts not generally kim^Ym^ the community; but this insurmountable difficulty is grt increased in the case of non-residents,, as most of the means by which indebtedness becomes known in the community, do not in their case exist.
The principle of this decision reaches, indeed, far beyond this case. In no one of the numerous cases in which surety is required to be given, is it expressly required, that they shall be resident citizens, and yet it is obvious that the sureties of sheriffs, executors, administrators, guardians, $*e. ought to be persons residing within the State, The case of a sure
These considerations, although we doubted at first, have led our minds to the conclusion, that the legislation upon this subject, as well as upon others, must, unless the contrary is expressed, be understood to be in reference to our own citizens.
Our statute provisions upon this subject, are evidently derived from the English statutes, of first James, and first Charles, providing for bail in error, our statute being almost a literal copy of that of 3 Chas. 1, c. 4, § 4, Tidd’s Prac. 1073. The English statute does not, any more than ours, require that the “sureties” shall be resident in the kingdom, yet being considered as bail merely, and as such, if excepted to for insufficiency, required to justify, it follows necessarily, that they were required to be resident within the kingdom.
This conclusion, as it is decisive of the case, renders it unnecessary to consider the other points presented on the record. Let the judgment be affirmed.