
    The State vs. P. M. Kizer.
    1. Sheriee. Criminal law. Special deputy may take hail. Act of 1846, ch. 22. A special deputy may take "bail for the appearance of a defendant, arrested by him to answer a criminal charge, in all cases where a sheriff has that power.
    2. Same. Same. Deputation. Presumption. It is not necessary to render a special deputation by the sheriff valid that the deputation or process should show that the occasion for such deputation was urgent. This will be presumed.
    3. Oases cited. State vs. Edwards, 4 Humph., 226.
    PROM JOHNSON.
    This was a proceeding by scire facias against bail, from tbe Circuit Court of Johnson county. There was a demurrer to tbe scire facias, and tbe main ground thereof was, that the bail-bond was taken by a special deputy sheriff. At tbe March Term, 1857, Judge Patterson gave judgment in favor of tbe demurrer, and Attorney-Greneral Powell, on behalf of tbe State, appealed in error.
    
      Sneed, Attorney-General, for the State.
    L. C. Haynes, for the defendant.
   CaRütheRS, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a proceeding by scire facias, to render the defendant liable for $250, the penalty of his bond for the appearance of David M. Lindsey at the Circuit Court of Johnson county at the March Term, 1856, to answer the State on a charge of tippling.

The capias issued from Johnson to the sheriff of Sullivan county. James Gr. Eans was deputized by sheriff Dulaney of Sullivan to execute the writ by an endorsement on the back of the process' in these words

“ I depute James G-. Eans to execute the within. 1st day of December, 1855. Witness my hand and seal.

The writ was executed, and bond for the appearance of Lindsey, with Kizer security, taken on the same day. On the failure of defendant to attend, a forfeiture was regularly entered, upon which this scire facias was issued. Demurrer to the scire facias was sustained, and appeal by the State to this Court.

The defence is rested upon two grounds: 1, a special deputy has no power to take bail of a defendant in a State case, arrested by him; that this can be done only by the sheriff himself or by a general deputy; 2, that the sheriff can only appoint special deputies on “urgent occasionsand that not appearing in the entry of the deputation in this case, renders the appointment void.

It is true that previous to the act of 1845, ch. 22, Nich. Sup., 285, it had been held in various cases, (1 Meigs’s Big., 371,) that the taking of a recognizance for the appearance of a.defendant in a State case was a judicial act, and could not he delegated, hut could only he done hy the sheriff. But that act changed the law, and provided that “ deputy sheriffs shall have the same power to execute all process that sheriffs now have, and to take recognizances from persons arrested upon capias as sheriffs now have power to do.” This, it is insisted, only extends to general deputies. ~We cannot so limit the construction, hut think it embraces special as well as general deputies: all who had a right to arrest defendants could legally admit them to hail.

On the other point we are equally clear that it is not necessary, to make a valid deputation, that it should appear in the endorsement of the sheriff that an “urgent occasion” existed, hut that will he presumed.

The judgment of the Circuit Court upon the demurrer to the scire facias is reversed, and judgment given here for the penalty of the bond.  