Court Opinion

ID: 4937326
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:17:33.000552+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:44.499054
License: Public Domain

Cornish, J.
Scire facias upon a recognizance taken before the Judge of the Police Court for the City of Belfast. The defendants pleaded nul tiel record, and the case comes to this court on exceptions to the ruling of the presiding Justice, admitting the recognizance in evidence and giving judgment for the State upon the introduction of the record of default of the defendants on said recognizance.
The defendants contend that in three respects there was a fatal variance between the allegations in the writ and the recitals in the recognizance and record.
I. That the condition of the recognizance alleged in the writ is "to appear before the Supreme Judicial Court next to be holden at Belfast, etc. ... to answer to a complaint found against said Winfield S. Edminster and now pending in said court, for keeping and depositing intoxicating liquors at Belfast etc.” while the condition of the recognizance is "to appear and prosecute his said appeal.”
2. That the writ alleges a recognizance taken before "Reuel W. Rogers, Judge of the Police Court of the City of Belfast” while the recognizance purports to have been given "at a Police Court holden at the Police Court Room in said City.”
*4883. That the writ alleges that said Edminster "although solemnly called upon said complaint,” did not appear, etc., and that the sureties "although solemnly called upon said indictment to bring in the body of said Winfield S. Edminster” did not appear, etc., while the record was of a default of the defendants on a recognizance to prosecute an appeal from a sentence of the Police Court of the City of Belfast.
These three objections must be considered in the light of R. S., ch. 134, sec.' 27, which provides as follows: "No action on any recognizance shall be defeated nor judgment thereon arrested for an omission to record a default at the proper term, nor for any defect in the form of the recognizance, if it can be sufficiently understood from its tenor, at what court the party or witness was to appear, and from the description of the offence charged, that the magistrate was authorized to require and take the same.”
The purpose of this statute, originally passed in 1841, is to modify the strictness of the common law and to prevent the thwarting or delaying of justice by mere technicalities, and in carrying out its spirit a liberal construction has been adopted by this court. State v. Hatch, 59 Maine, 410; State v. Cobb, 71 Maine, 198; State v. Howley, 73 Maine, 552; State v. Gilmore, 81 Maine, 405. A similar-statute in Massachusetts, Rev. Laws, ch. 217, sec. 73, has received a similar construction from the highest court of that State. Commonwealth v. Nye, 7 Gray, 316; Same v. Green, 138 Mass. 200; Same v. Teevens, 143 Mass. 210.
The recognizance in the case at bar fulfills all the requirements of the statute. The court at which the defendants were to appear was the April term, 1908, of the Supreme Judicial Court for Waldo County; and the offense charged was one within the jurisdiction of the Police Court of Belfast and in which the Judge of that Court was authorized to -require and take bail. The Court therefore from which the appeal was taken, the judgment appealed from, and the court at which the conusors were to appear, were all set forth in the recognizance.
*489The alleged variances contended for by the defendants are immaterial and inconsequential. We will consider them in the order raised..
1. To appear in the higher court and answer to a complaint there pending, necessarily implies that it is pending there on appeal. The nature of the offense as set forth in the writ shows that the higher court could have no original jurisdiction of the matter and that if pending there must be on appeal. The allegation in the writ and the recital in the recognizance are in effect only different methods of stating the same fact.
2. The variance claimed as to the description of the court taking the recognizanc'e is without merit. The words are exact equivalents. One court and one alone was designated. State v. Regan, 63 Maine, 127.
3. The word "indictment” instead of "complaint” in the writ is a mere clerical error, self evident and harmless. Its occurrence is easily explained. The original writ, which is before this court for inspection, was a printed form containing the word "indictment” in three places. In two places that word was erased and "complaint” was inserted in its stead, in order to make the writ conform to the facts. In the third place this alteration was overlooked by the person preparing the writ for service. But after alleging that these three defendants, stating their names, gave the recognizance in question on a complaint and that the principal had made default on "said complaint,” the averment that the sureties in the same recognizance had defaulted on "said indictment” is such an apparent clerical error and refers so unmistakably to the complaint already set forth that no one could be misled thereby. It was a single recognizance taken in a single complaint.
All the objections raised by the learned counsel for defendants are more ingenious than sound.

Exceptions overruled.