22 Mo. 474 | Mo. | 1856
delivered the opinion of the court.
In order to simplify the questions raised here, and render the solution of them more easy, we will briefly refer to the nature of a recognizance, and the usual proceedings to enforce its execution, confining what we have'to say to a recognizance taken in a criminal proceeding to secure the appearance of the accused. It is, as we all know, an acknowledgment, taken by some court or officer authorized by law .to do so, of a debt due to the State, but suspended upon the condition that the accused appear in court at the appointed time, and answer the alleged charge, and do not depart without leave. The essentials of such a recognizance are, that it be taken by a competent court or officer, in a case existing before such authority, and for the performance of some act that the law allows to be secured in that way, and in the form prescribed for that purpose.
At common law the obligation was created by the mere verbal acknowledgment of the party, which the law entrusted the court or officer with the duty of taking and certifying ; but our statute (R. C. 1845, chap. 138, art. 9, § 14, p. 893) has altered this, and, for the better security of the party against mistake or design, has required all recognizances that are taken in open court to be entered on the minutes of the court, and the substance to be read to the party ; and in all other cases, when taken out of court, to be in writing and signed by the persons to be bound. Of course, the party is bound as soon as the obligation is entered into in the form prescribed ; but if it be taken by an officer or in another court, it must be certified and
Although a recognizance can only be taken to secure the performance of some act that the law allows to be secured in that way, we do not deem it essential to the validity of the recognizance, that it should specify upon its face the specific charge that the party is to answer to. It is impossible to reconcile the American cases upon this subject, and we shall not attempt it, as we think the matter is plain enough.
The meaning of a recognizance is, that the party shall not only appear and answer the particular charge, but also, in the language of Hawkins, (PI. Or. b. 2, chap. 15, § 84,) “put himself as much under the power of the court as if he had been in the custody of the proper officer;” and'in the same book, it is laid down, “ If persons be bound by a recognizance that J. S. shall appear in the K. B., in such a term, to answer such an information against him, and not depart till he shall be discharged by the court, and afterwards the attorney general enter a nolle prosequi as to that information, and exhibit another upon which the defendant is convicted, and he refuses to appear in court after personal notice, the recognizance is forfeited. For, being express that the party shall not depart till he be discharged by the court, it can not be satisfied unless he be forthcoming and ready to answer any other information exhibited against him while he continued undischarged.” In the People v. Stager, (10 Wend. 431,) it was said that the clause “ that he shall not depart until discharged,” is not necessary to be inserted in the recognizance, in respect to the charge upon which the recognizance is entered into ; that its use is to detain the party upon other charges that may be exhibited against
We believe it will be found upon examination, that the precedents of recognizances are quite as common in the general form, to answer “ to an indictment to be found,” without any specification of the particular offence,, as in the other form, specifying the particular charge.
And we do not think our legislature intended by the clause to which we have been referred, (R. C. 1845, chap. 138, art. 2, § 26,) to make any change in the law in this respect, as indeed no reason can be suggested for doing so. Now, if we strike out of this recognizance the words in which the justice has attempted to describe the particular charge, it is a recognizance to answer generally to any indictment that may be preferred against the party: just what it would have been, in substance, had the particular offence been described with technical exactness ; on account of the insertion in it of the clause “ not to depart,” &c. The recognizance therefore can not be void for the alleged defect, even if the language describing the particular -charge be wholly unintelligible, which, by the way, is not the case, although it is certainly a very informal description of a felonious assault.
A justice of the peace has jurisdiction to commit and recognize for all offences committed in his county, cognizable in the Circuit -Court, and of course the justice here was a competent officer to take a recognizance from this defendant for his appearance in the Circuit Court to answer to an indictment to be there preferred against him. And, although there must have been a case pending before him, in order to give validity to the recognizance he took, yet the particular facts by which he acquired jurisdiction to take the recognizance need not and usually
In reference to the proceeding upon the recognizance, a few remarks will be sufficient to answer the objections that have been taken. The recognizance, after the forfeiture, being equivalent to a judgment against the party for the amount confessed, the State may proceed to collect it upon execution ; and in England, in criminal recognizances, where there was no doubt as to the forfeiture, this seems to have been done without any scire facias, as was at one time the practice in New York, or the State may bring a fresh suit upon it; and if the latter course were taken, it.might then be insisted that the State should sue in the form prescribed to other persons. The present proceeding however, is not a civil action within the meaning of the new code, but a mere continuation of an existing proceeding, to enforce the collection of the debt confessed.
In England, as soon as the recognizance is forfeited, it is estreated into the’court of exchequer for collection, and we briefly refer to the proceedings there to show the nature and character of a scire facias, whether taken in criminal proceedings or for other purposes. An extent is a writ of execution against the body, goods and lands of the debtor, and when used by the crown, is an ancient prerogative writ for obtaining satisfaction of debts due to the king ; and upon a recognizance of any kind to the king, if it be clearly forfeited, as usually sufficiently appeared when the condition was for the appearance of