Court Opinion

ID: 5457200
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:25:14.056635+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:42.769940
License: Public Domain

Harris, J.
The revised statutes, (2 R. S. 350, § 23,) provide that when a defendant is committed to prison for want of bail, the plaintiff shall declare against him before the end of the next term after that at which the process upon which he was committed was returnable, or. “ the defendant shall be discharged from his imprisonment, and shall be entitled to judgment of discontinuance against the plaintiff.” This provision is imperative—nothing is left to the discretion of the court— nothing depends upon the practice of the court. The legislature have said what shall be done in the case; and the court has nothing to do but carry into effect the direction of the legislature.
But while by the 24th section of the same act the plaintiff is required, in terms equally positive, to declare against a defendant, who has appeared by putting in and perfecting bail, before the end of the next term, there is this remarkable difference in the consequence of a failure to declare within the time provided. In the former case, the defendant shall be discharged and shall have judgment of discontinuance; but in the latter case, it is only provided that “ judgment of discontinuance mat be entered according to the course and practice of the court” It would not be easy to present an example which would more clearly illustrate the distinction between a statute which permits a thing to be done, and one which requires a thing to be done.
In the former case, the statute is compulsory—in the latter the whole matter is left to be determined by the discretion of the court, and according to its course and practice. There can be no doubt that the legislature intended to vest in the court the power, in cases where the defendant is not in prison, to exercise the discretion which the superior court has in this instance assumed.
It becomes unnecessary therefore, to examine the question which was principally discussed upon the argument of this motion, whether this court has the power to award a mandamus in such a case. The motion must be denied with costs.