State v. Row

89 Iowa 581 | Iowa | 1894

Gbangeb, C. J.

The following is the record of the district court, declaring the forfeiture:

“State of Iowa v. Joseph Row. Be it remembered that on this third day of November, 1890, the above-cause coming on for hearing on the motion of plaintiff for forfeiture .of the appearance bond of the defendant Joseph Bow, and, it appearing to the court that the-judgment against the defendant Joseph Bow has been affirmed by the supreme court of Iowa, and that the-defendant Joseph Bow was required by this court, that the sentence and judgment of said court might be executed and performed, and the said Joseph Bow was-called and failed to appear, and no person for him, and his appearance bond was produced, and said Joseph Bow and the sureties on his bond, to wit, C. II. Ward, J. B. Hurlburt, A. H. Miles, and M. W. Ward, were called in open court, and failing to appear and to produce the said Joseph Bow, the said appearance and underbaking to appear is hereby ordered, adjudged, and declared to be forfeited and in default.” The undertaking of the bond is that “in case the said J. A.. *583Bow shall well and truly pay the said fine, or such part of it as the supreme court may direct, and if the said J. A. Bow shall surrender himself in execution of the judgment and direction of the supreme court, and in all respects abide the orders and judgments of the supreme court, then this bond to be void; otherwise, to be and remain in full force and effect.” The default shown in the record is not a failure to make payment, but it is for want of the personal appearance of Joseph Bow, ‘ ‘that the judgment of the court might be executed and performed.”

The default as to the sureties is for not producing him. The situation, then, is this: The default was taken November 3, 1890. Nine days before that, the sheriff of Boone county had surrendered him at the penitentiary, and he was, at the time the default was taken, doing precisely the thing for which the district court desired his presence. He was called that he might be committed to the penitentiary. The court, through its processes, had already so committed him. It is not to be said, as a legal conclusion, that, had he not been imprisoned at the instance of the state, he would neither have appeared, nor his sureties produced him, when his appearance was called for. The state, by placing him in the penitentiary, had rendered it absolutely impospossible for him to appear, or for the sureties on his bond to produce him. Under such circumstances there could be no default. It appears, from an affidavit to the motion to set aside the default, that one of the sureties had sent an agent to Missouri to secure and return Bow to the state, to avoid default on his bond, and Bow was in the custody of such agent when the sheriff from Boone county arrived, and took him into custody, and afterwards delivered him at the penitentiary. It further appears that the sheriff was appointed as agent, under a requisition from the governor, at the request of one of the sureties on the bond.

*584It is said that the judgment was an imprisonment for five years, and payment of the costs of prosecution, and that the costs have not been paid. But the default is not for such a failure. The record makes no disclosures as to a default in the payment of costs. In our judgment the motion to set aside the default should have been sustained, and the order of the court overruling it is BEVEBSEL.

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