Judges: Chapman
Filed Date: 1/15/1864
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
The defendant was arrested on an execution which had issued upon the judgment declared on in this ease,
If a recognizance had been taken according to law, the plain tiff’s only remedy would have been by an action upon it. Coburn v. Palmer, 10 Cush. 273. So if the plaintiff had consented to the proceeding, the judgment would have been discharged. But he cannot be regarded as consenting to it. It is true that the magistrate by whom the recognizance was taken had been his attorney in the prosecution of the suit, and was still his attorney for enforcing the execution ; but in taking the recognizance he acted as a magistrate, professing to have the authority of law, independent of the consent of the plaintiff. Whether it would have been beyond his power, as the attorney of the plaintiff, to consent to the discharge of the defendant upon his giving a void recognizance, need not be decided. The case of Kellogg v. Gilbert, 10 Johns. 220, seems to show that he had not such power. But it is sufficient in the present case that the form of the recognizance was settled by him as a magistrate, and not as the attorney of the plaintiff. As between the plaintiff and the defendant, there was an escape of the defendant, and the judgment is not discharged in consequence of the arrest.