Court Opinion

ID: 6416079
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:56:16.606845+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:33.520326
License: Public Domain

Ames, J.
By the terms of the Gen. Sts. c. 124, § 11, “a person taken on execution, and recognizing for his appearance to take the oath for the relief of poor debtors, may, if surrendered by his surety, recognize anew,” &c. And by § 17 the magistrate may accept his recognizance pending the examination, and at any time after the debtor is carried before him. The only question, therefore, with regard to the defendant Canterbury would seem to be this, Was the debtor surrendered by his surety ? It does not appear that any officer holding the precept by virtue of which the arrest was made was present to receive the debtor into actual custody, and it does appear that Canterbury was not personally present before the magistrate. But the plain inference from the agreement of the plaintiffs’ attorney, indorsed upon the notification, seems to be, not merely that the examina*435tian was to be postponed for several days, but that there would be a movement on the part of the judgment debtor and his surety Canterbury to relieve the latter from his liability, and also that there was a consent on the part of the plaintiffs’ attorney that Canterbury should be so relieved, provided another surety, satisfactory to the magistrate, should be substituted in his place. It is obvious that the surrender contemplated by the statute does not necessarily, and under all circumstances, mean a literal surrender into the custody of an officer. Under the agreement in this case, the presence of an officer would have been entirely needless and unimportant. There would have been nothing for him to do. The parties evidently did not contemplate a literal arrest, or anything more than a constructive surrender. The true meaning of the agreement manifestly is, that a new surety may be taken in place of the former one, in the same manner and with the same effect as if the judgment debtor had been brought before the magistrate, delivered into the custody of the officer holding the precept, and then allowed to recognize anew. This was an agreement which it was perfectly competent for the parties to make. The judgment creditor is always at liberty to waive formalities that are intended for his security, if he should see fit to do so. See Mutual Safety Insurance Co. v. Woodward, 8 Allen, 148; Lord v. Skinner, 9 Allen, 376. The agreement was made in the interest and for the benefit of Canterbury, and imports that the offer of the new surety was to be in effect for the purpose of relieving him. The substitution was not for the benefit of the debtor, or to render him any less or more liable than he was already. Under the agreement, the appearance of the debtor before the magistrate would have the same effect as if he were brought there by Canterbury. It must be assumed that he came there at the request of Canterbury, or at least in pursuance of his obligation to him. It seems to us, therefore, that Canterbury stands on the same footing as if he had made a formal surrender of his principal, and that he is not liable on his recognizance.
The same considerations that liberate him, however, are con elusive against the other party, Smith. It is not to be inferred *436from the facts agreed, that Smith’s presence before the magistrate was accidental, or that he was ignorant of the true state of the case. If the magistrate could rightfully treat the presence of the debtor as a constructive surrender, (and under the agreement we think that he could,) he not only could, but was bound to, take a new recognizance. And upon that new recognizance, into which Smith voluntarily entered, he must be held liable in the action against him. In the suit against Canterbury, judgment must be given for the defendant, and, in the suit against Smith, judgment for the plaintiffs. Judgment accordingly.