
    MICHAEL FERRALL vs. WILLIAM W. BRICKELL.
    A sheriff is hail for two defendants. After judgment, a ca. sa. is issued and executed on one, who gives security for his appearance at court. The other defendant is not to he found. Before the day when the defendant, who was arrested, was hound to appear, he and the plaintiff entered into an agreement, that he would secure the plaintiff in some other debts he owed him, and in consideration thereof, the plaintiff would release him from the ca. sa. and would not at court oppose his discharge under the insolvent debtor’s law. Held, that this did not operate as a release of the debt, nor did it discharge the sheriff from his liability as bail for the other defendant.
    Appeal from the Superior Court of Law of Halifax County, at the Fall Term, 1843, his Honor Judge Baxley presiding.
    The case was, that the plaintiff sued out his writ against Redding J. Hawkins and Figures Lowe, returnable to Halifax County Court, which was executed by the defendant Brickell, he being then the sheriff of said county, without taking any bail. The plaintiff prosecuted his suit regularly to judgment, and then sued out his ca. sa. against the defendants, to wit, Hawkins and Lowe. Hawkins was arrested under the ca. sa. by the sheriff Brickell, the defendant, and the execution returned non est inventus as to the defendant Lowe. This sci. fa. then issued, to subject the defendant Brickell, to the payment of the judgment against Hawkins and Lowe, as the special bail of Lowe. Before the arrest of Hawkins, he claimed the benefit of the act of the General Assembly, passed for the relief of insolvent debtors, and gave to the sheriff a ca. sa. bond, as it is termed, that is, a bond for his personal appearance at the succeeding term of Halifax County Court, to take the benefit of the said act. Before the day, upon which Hawkins was, by his bond, bound to appear, he and the plaintiff came to an agreement, that Hawkins should give the plaintiff Ferrall, security for some other debts which he owed him, and Ferrall should release his claim against him, under the judgment upon which he had been arrested, and should withdraw opposition to his discharge; and it was further stipulated, that Ferrall should be at liberty to pursue his claim against Lowe an(j tjle defen(jant Brickell, as his bail. Hawkins did secure the debts as agreed, and no further steps were taken by Ferrall upon the ca. sa. bond against him, but no release was executed. The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, subject to the question of law, reserved for the consideration of the court. The presiding judge set aside the verdict, and gave judgment of non-suit against the plaintiff, from which he appealed.
    
      Badger for the plaintiff.
    
      B. F. Moore for the defendant. .
   Nash, J.

In the opinion of this court, there was error in the judgment of non-suit against the plaintiff, and we suspect the error was occasioned by not duly regarding the situation in which the parties stood at the time the agreement was entered into. The defendant Brickell, by not taking bail from the defendants, Hawkins and Lowe, became under our law special bail, or bail to the action ; and, as such, liable to all the responsibilities of bail; he became bound, that the defendants should pay such judgment as might be recovered against them, or surrender their bodies. Both in England and in this State, it is well settled, that a plaintiff-, seeking redress against bail, must first sue out an execution against the body of the principal, and have it returned, before he can proceed against the bail either by action of debt on the bond, or by scire facias. But the ca. sa. answers, and is intended to answer, a very different purpose there, from what it does here. The bail in England stipulates merely for the delivery of the defendant, and not for the payment of the demand, and the plaintiff has the right to proceed either against the property or person of the defendant. It has therefore been held proper, that he should do something plainly indicating his intention to proceed against the person, in order to fix the bail. Petersdorf on Bail, page 355. Wilmon v. Clark, 1 Lord Ray. 156. South v. Griffith, Cro. Car. 481. Upon the above principle it is, that Mr. Sellon, in his practice, 2d vol. 44, lays it down as a rule, that if the plaintiff sues out an execution against the property of the principal, it is an election by him which discharges the bail. This doctrine has been long since overruled, and it is settled that the plaintiff may take out a fieri facias against the property of the defendant, and, upon its proving unavailing, may then issue his ca. sa. or may issue both at the same time, provided the latter is not executed until the former is returned, even where there is a partial payment on the fi. fa. Archbold’s practice, addenda, 13. McNair v. Ragland, 2 Dev. Eq. 42. The object of the ca. sa. then is, to give the bail notice, that the plaintiff has elected to go against the body of the defendant, and until he receive such notice he is not bound to surrender his principal. Petersdorf, 355, 359. It does not in England issue with any view to its execution. The sheriff is not guilty of any misfeasance in office by not executing it, for after it has lain in his office the last four days next. before it is returnable, the plaintiff can compel him to return a non est inventus, although he may know where the defendant is. Petersdorf, 359. Hunt v. Cox, 3 Bur. 1360. 1st Black. R. 393. 2 Tidd 1128, n. i. But the ca. sa. in this State was intended for a different purpose ; not simply to notify the bail of the election the plaintiff had made, but to give to him the full benefit of the process. Finly v. Smith, 3 Dev. 248. By the 3d sec. of ch. 10 of the Revised Statutes, it is provided, that “the plaintiff, after final judgment, shall not take out execution against the bail, until an execution be first returned, that the defendant is not to be found in his proper county, and until a scire facias has been made known to the bail, which scire facias shall not issue until such return.” The 18th sec. of the 119th ch. of the Revised Statutes, makes it the duty of the sheriff, under a heavy penalty, by himself or his lawful officer or deputy, to execute and duly return all writs and other process which shall be delivered to him twenty days before the sitting of the court, to which they are made returnable. When, therefore, a plaintiff has taken out his execution against the body of the defendant, directed to the proper county, and caused it to be placed, in proper time, in the hands of the proper officer, he ^ ¿[one ap f,[le ]aw requires him to do, to entitle himself to the benefit of his process against the bail, but not until the sheriff has returned, he is not to be found in his proper county, can he proceed; and the sheriff makes his return upon oath. It is not denied, that if the plaintiff, Ferrall, had released to Hawkins the debt, for which he had a judgment against him and Lowe, that the release would have operated to the benefit of Lowe, and to the discharge of the bail, for a release to one co-obligor is a release to all. Coke L. 252. 2 Bos. & P. 630. But there is no evidence jn the case that any release was ever executed by Ferrall. So, if Ferrall, after Hawkins was arrested under the ca. sa. and while so in the custody of the sheriff, had discharged him from arrest, it would have discharged the debt also against Lowe, and consequently against the bail, because it would have been the act of the party himself, Bryan v. Simonton, 1 Hawks, 51. At the time the agreement took place between Ferrall and Hawkins, the latter was no longer, in the custody of the sheriff. The defendant, Brickell, as sheriff, had discharged his duty by making the arrest and taking the bond for the appearance of Hawkins — and as bail for Hawkins, he was discharged the moment he was in custody upon the ca. sa. In the case of Hawkins v. Hall, decided at the last term of this court, the court say, that when a debtor in custody under a ca. sa. tenders to the sheriff a bond, as prescribed in the 58th Ch. 5, 8, of the Revised Statutes, that it is his duty to accept it and release the debtor from custody. The discharge then from actual custody or imprisonment is the act of the law or of the debtor under the law; consequently the creditor is at liberty to proceed against any other person, liable to the payment of the debt. But it is said, the agreement not to oppose the discharge of Hawkins, as an insolvent, operated as a discharge to Lowe, and consequently to Brickell as the bail of Lowe. We are at a loss to perceive upon what principle this conclusion is founded. The plaintiff has done all the law required him to do. He has taken out his execution, as broad as his judgment, and placed it in the hands of the proper officer, and he has done nothing to impede its full operation. Was he bound to oppose the discharge of Hawkins? In the case last referred to, the court say he was not bound, nor was the sheriff as bail in any manner concerned in the effort to be made by Hawkins to procure his discharge under the insolvent law. Wistanly v. Head, 4 Taunt. 193. The agreement, not to look to him for the debt for which Lowe was jointly bound, did not operate as a release to Lowe, nor would it have had that operation if under seal. In the case of Hutton v. Eyn, 6th Taun. 289, it is expressly decided, that a covenant not to sue one of two joifit obligors, does not operate as a release to the other. Nor has it that operation when the covenant provides, that if suit is brought against the other obligor, the covenant may be pleaded in bar. Dean v. Newhall, 8 Taun. 168.

We are therefore of opinion, that there is error in the judgment of his Honor — that the judgment of non-suit must be set aside, and judgment entered for the plaintiff, with costs,

Peb. Curiam, Judgment"below reversed, and judgment for the plaintiff,  