1 Cal. 345 | Cal. | 1850
By the Court,
Application for a discharge under a writ of habeas corpus. The defendant was arrested in a civil suit, under the first subdivision of section 74 of the Practice Act., (Statutes of 1850, y>. 435,) which authorizes an arrest
Ts the defendant included within any class of persons designated in the section of the statute above cited % If so, it must be upon the ground that he was the agent of the plaintiff, or ivas acting in & fiduciary capacity. Was he the agent of the plaintiff? We think not. The relation which subsisted between the plaintiff and defendant was that of partners, and not that of principal and agent; and although one partner is, for many purposes, deemed the agent of his co-partner, we think that the most natural meaning to be attached to the term agent in the statute, is that which limits its application to cases in which the parties stand in the relation to each other of principal and agent-in the strict legal acceptation of the words.
Did the defendant act in a fiduciary capacity ? We think not. These words have a legal signification, and are used to denote persons occupying the position of guardians, trustees, &e. But we apprehend that they are never used, in strict legal phraseology, to characterize the relation which one partner holds to another.
The case, therefore, was not one, in which the judge was an-
The fourth subdivision of section 20 of the Habeas Corpus Act, {Slot. of 1850, p. 338,) authorizes us to discharge a person under arrest, “ when the process, though proper in form, has “ been issued in a case not allowed by law.” If we are correct in the view above taken, the present case is one in which an arrest is not allowed by law. The defendant should be discharged.
Ordered accordingly.