
    The People vs. Clary and Fleming.
    A recognizance can not be respited from one court to another, contrary to the remonstrance and express dissent of the bail, if they have the principal in court at the time of the motion for a respite.
    
    It seems, however, that a recognizance maybe respited without the knowledge, approbation or consent of the bail, and still be obligatory; and that to discharge them from liability, there must be an express dissent.
    
    Suit on a criminal recognizance. The declaration was on a recognizance entered into by the defendants on the 9th April, 1834, as the sureties of one Martin C. Hill, conditioned for the appearance of Hill at the then next Albany general sessions, to answer to certain indictments pending against him for obtaining goods by false pretences, to abide the order of the court and not depart, &c. The declaration was, that at the next general sessions, to wit, on the 19th June, the recognizance was respited until the next court of oyer and terminer, to be held in and for the county of Albany, on the first day "of September; that during the sitting of that court, to wit, on, &c„ the recognizance was again respited until the next court of oyer and terminer, to be held in and for the county of Albany, on the 20th April, 1835; at which court, to wit, the oyer and terminer held in April, 1835, the defendant did not appear, but made default, and his sureties also made default to produce him. The defendants pleaded that Hill, according to the condition of the recognizance, did appear at the general sessions hoi den in and for the county of Albany, next after the date of the recognizance, and that the general sessions, contrary to the remonstrance and against the express desire and request of the defendants, respited the recognizance to the oyer and terminer then next to be held in and for the same county; wherefore they prayed judgment, if the plaintiffs ought to have or maintain their action. The defendants also pleaded that Hill appeared at the oyer and terminer holden in September, 1834, and that the recognizance was respited until April, 1835, without the knowledge, approbation or consent of the de[375] fendants. To these pleas the district attorney of Albany, who prose, cnted the recognizance, demurred, and the defendants joined in demurrer. The case was submitted on written arguments by
    
      E. Livingston (district attorney), for the plaintiff.
    
      S. Stevens, for the defendants.
    
      
      
         People v. Gay, 10 Wend. 509. A criminal recognizance for appearance can not be respited and continued until a succeeding term ; but if the party bound fail to appear, a suit upon his default may be stayed. People v. Hainer, 1 Denio, 454 (Bronson, J. says, that tli3 question was not made in any of the previous cases). The court may make an obligatory order that the defendant should appear and answer at a future day ; and then if the party makes default, a suit may be brought for the forfeiture previously incurred. Id. The right to a speedy trial is secured not only by the constitution, but rests upon the principles of the common, law. Klock v. The People, 2 Parker’s Grim. R. 676.
    
   By the Court,

Nelson, Ch. J.

A principal who has been admitted to bail is in the custody of his sureties, who are considered his keepers, and if they fear an escape, may re-seize and bring him before a magistrate or the court by whom he may be committed, and thus the bail be discharged from their recognizance; he is still, however, at liberty to find new sureties (1 Chitty’s Cr. L. 85; Hawkins P. C., b. 2, ch. 15, §3 and 84; Pelersdorff on Bail in Cr. Cases, 515). So the bail may force the principal to appear according to the condition of the recognizance. Ibid. Serjeant Hawkins states, §84, that if a man’s bail, who are gaolers of his own choosing, do as effectually secure his appearance, and put him as much under the power of the court as if he had been in custody of the proper officer, they seem to have answered the end of the law, and to have done all that can reasonably be required of them. See also Bacon’s Abridg. tit. Bail in Cr. Cases, L (10 Wendell, 433). It seems to me that the first plea of the defendants affords a conclusive answer to the breach assigned for the non-appearance of the principal at the oyer and terminer in April, 1835. The render of the principal in court at the general sessions and the refusal of the defendants to stand as bail until the court to which it was proposed to respite the recognizance, can be understood in no other sense than as a virtual surrender of the principal; a right which all the books concede belongs to the bail even in criminal cases. No particular form of proceeding, as in civil cases, has been prescribed; the bail, if they distrust the fidelity of the principal, may seize and carry him before a justice of the peace, who has authority to bail or commit, and if new bail is not given, the magistrate is bound to commit; or the [376] principal may be carried before the court while in session, and there bo surrendered, or in the language of Serjeant Hawkins, put under the power of the court the same as if he had been in the custody of the proper officer, and which, he adds, is all that can reasonably be required of the bail. When the defendants in this case refused to stand any longer as bail, the court should have ordered the principal into the custody of their officer, and committed him to jail, unless new bail had been furnished. The court had not the power to compel a continuance of the responsibility against the express dissent of the bail. If it possessed such power, a magistrate before whom a surrender may be made, might claim the same power, and the consequence would be a denial of the right of surrender, which can not be sanctioned. The second plea is, I think, defective; but as the demurrer is to both pleas, and the first is clearly bad, the defendants are entitled to judgment.

Judgment for the defendants.  