20 N.C. 378 | N.C. | 1839
after stating the case as above, proceeded as follows: It may be remarked in the first place, that there was no evidence to sustain the plea that the charge was one of burglary, so as not to be, for that reason, within the jurisdiction of the County Court. The condition of the recognizance does not so express; and the warrant falls short of making a case of burglary, by omitting several of its essential requisites, as, for example, that the breaking was into the dwelling house, or that the smoke house was a part of the dwelling house, or within the curtilage. But supposing this to have been otherwise, it is quite clear, we think, that the defendant’s objection is unfounded in law.
The obligation of the recognizance does not depend upon the enquiry whether the Court, before which the party is required to appear, has jurisdiction of a particular crime charged against the party, but upon the duty and power of the magistrate to examine and admit such party to bail. By the act of 1715, 1 Rev. Stat. ch. 35, sec. 1, the duty of examination by a magistrate before commitment is enjoined; and it is further prescribed, that the magistrate shall admit the party to bail, if bailable. The mode of letting to bail is -not specified; but it must be inferred that such method was meant as was authorized by antecedent laws, or such as might subsequently be enacted. This certainly includes a recognizance acknowledged before a justice of the peace and by him returned into a common law court of record and there enrolled, as enacted by ancient statutes and practised almost immemorial-
Per Curiam. Judgment affirmed.