32 Mo. App. 522 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
— The record in this case discloses the following facts : That James O. Peyton on the twenty - sixth day of March, 1887, during the March term of the Cass county circuit court, was indicted for the crime of burglary and larceny, by the grand jury empaneled at said term. The indictment was regularly found, returned and filed, and the defendant Peyton, at the time being under arrest and in custody of the sheriff of' the county, on the eleventh day of April, with his co-defendants E. N. Peyton,. John Peyton, John S. Johnson and E. W. Shaler, as his securities, entered into a recognizance as follows: ‘c State of Missouri, County of Cass. — ss. We, James O. Peyton, as principal and Edward N. Peyton, and E. W. Shaler and John S. Johnson and John Peyton as securities, acknowledge ourselves to jointly and severally owe and be indebted
The practice in proceedings of this character is to look to and examine the record and if it is sufficient to support the judgment, the judgment should be sustained notwithstanding there may appear omissions and irregularities in the recognizance or the writ. The scire facias is not the commencement of a civil action to be answered or demurred to as a pleading in a civil suit, but is simply an incident to a proceeding already in court, and the defense, if any, interposed by defendants served with such a writ should strike at the record and set forth valid and substantial reasons why, from defects in the record, the judgment of forfeiture should not be made absolute and execution should not go against them. Section 1, page 118, Laws, 1881, • provides: “ When the defendant is in custody or under arrest for a bailable offense, the judge of the circuit court in which the indictment or information is pending may let him to bail and take his bond.” Under this section, Judge Sloan was expressly authorized to take the recognizance at the time and in the manner he did.
It is claimed that the principal in the recognizance, James O. Peyton, did not appear in person before the circuit judge at the time the bond was approved. This objection does not appear to have been raised in the lower court and is in conflict with the record. But even if it had been properly presented and shown to be true, it could be of no avail to these defendants. They admit that they signed the recognizance. If so, they would be held liable even if the principal had not signed it. Minor v. State, 1 Blackf. 236; State ex rel. v. Lewis, 4 Blackf. 20.
The fact that the recognizance obligated James O. Peyton to appear to answer the crime or charge of “burglary” when the indictment was for “burglary
It is claimed that neither the principal nor the securities in the recognizance were called three times at the courthouse before the forfeiture was taken. The record is at variance with this claim. The trial court found and expressed its finding that the defendant James O. Peyton was three times called at the courthouse door, but came not, but made default, and that each of the securities was likewise three times called, and they failed to respond, or to produce in court the principal in their bond. The record entry of the judgment of forfeiture also recites the fact that the parties were three times called. The evidence of Chas. Bush, acting deputy sheriff, was that he called each of the defendants three times. The only ground upon which such an objection to the proceeding can possibly be asserted is that the circuit court was in session in Barrett’s Hall, a building some two hundred and fifty feet distant from the old courthouse. It appears from the record that the courthouse had been condemned, and for some time prior to the date of this forfeiture, Barrett’s Hall had been used for a courthouse. As said in Bouldin v. Ewart, 63 Mo. loc. cit. 335: “The very fact of holding the court there necessarily implied á judicial assertion of the right to hold it. It was a de-facto court and its proceedings were not void, even should it be conceded that its session was at a place unauthorized by law. This being so, the place where such court was held was, at least pro 7iac vice, the courthouse.” See also Kane v. McCown, 55 Mo. 189.
It is further urged here that no second writ of scire facias was issued and that a single return of non est as to the principal did not authorize the judgment against him. It is true the record shows but one return of non
Prom a careful examination of the record we discover no error. The record presents a plain case of forfeited recognizance. The objections urged by defendants against the regularity of the proceedings are of a technical character and could in no manner affect the substantial rights of the parties. The judgment of the lower court is therefore affirmed.