
    [Chambersburg,
    October 25, 1824.]
    LINCOLN and another against WILLIAMS.
    IN ERROR.
    Where one is arrested in vacation, and gives bond, agreeably to the act of the 28th of March, 1820, to appear at the next court, and surrender himself to prison on failing to comply with all things required to entitle him to a discharge under the insolvent laws, the possession of personal property sufficient to satisfy the debt, and the omission to show it to the officer making the arrest, even if they make the arrest illegal, and the giving bond fraudulent, (which, it seems, they do not,) do not operate against a defence founded upon performance of the condition of the bond.
    
      A discharge at the court at which the petitioner was bound to appear, is a performance of the condition of the bond, whether the discharge be founded upon a petition filed in consequence of the arrest, or independently of it; and, consequently, it is unnecessary to recite the arrest in the petition, or to show, in any other way, that the petition was filed in continuation of the proceedings which, took place in vacation.
    Writ of error to the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon county, in an action of debt on a bond, dated the 19th of July, 1820, given under the provisions of the act of assembly of the 2Sth of March, 1S20, by Abel F. Lincoln and Charles Raymond, to William S. Williams, conditioned for the appearance of the said Abel F. Lincoln, “ before the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon county, at the next term, to be held on the second Monday of August, 1S20, and then and there to remain and abide the final order of the said court, to be made during such term, and surrender himself to prison, in case on his appearance, he shall not comply with all things required by law to procure his discharge, under the existing laws for the relief of insolvent debtors of this commonwealth. ”
    To show performance of the condition of the bond, the defendants proved, that to August term, 1820, viz. on the 17th of August, Lincoln filed a petition, in the usual form of what is called a voluntary petition, praying for the benefit of the several insolvent laws of this commonwealth, and the second Monday in September was appointed to hear his case; on which day he obtained his discharge as an insolvent debtor. The petitioner returned some real and personal property.
    The plaintiff then produced a petition, filed by the said’ Abel 
      
      F. Lincoln, to April term, 1830, and an order of the court, appointing the second of the following June for a bearing. On that day, the case was continued to August term, and on the 16th of August, 1820, the petition was dismissed. On the same day, Lincoln having been arrested at the suit of Wray Maize, gave bond, with the said Charles Raymond as security, ’conditioned for his appearance at the next court, to take the benefit of the insolvent laws; and, on application to Judge Stewart, he was discharged from arrest.
    On this state of facts, the presiding judge charged the jury, thus: “If the defendant had personal property when he gave the bond, and was discharged by Judge Stewart, it was not fair. While he had sufficient personal property, he could not legally be arrested. If he concealed the property, and procured the arrest for the purpose of preventing the plaintiff from getting the property he has a right to, it is unfair. The spirit of the act, requires fairness from the first step to the last. The proceeding at April may be laid out of the question. This court, where the defendant has plenty of personal property, and, instead of giving it up, goes to a judge and gives bond, has refused to receive his petition; stating that he was arrested in vacation, &c., being a falsehood and unfair conduct from the very face of his return, containing a large list of personal property. There are two forms of petitions in use, — ■ The one stating that the petitioner has been arrested in vacation, &e. the other by a person never arrested, but applying under section first of the act. This is in the latter form. If this was by mistake, or error of the clerk drawing it, we will not say it would conclude the defendants. If it really is a continuation of the proceedings on the arrest, the defendants have complied with the condition of the bond. If it is really an original application at August term, they are not freed from the bond. The proceedings in cases of this kind are not entered at large. Few are resisted — fewer are afterwards charged with fraud, and only short notes are made of the proceedings. The technical adherence to the literal meaning of words, has given place to the spirit and intent of parties. If, then, this is a continuation of the proceedings begun before Judge Stewart, the defendants are clear; if original, they are not.”
    The counsel for the defendants excepted to the opinion of the court, and removed the record to this court by writ of error.
    
      Shippen, for the plaintiffs in error,
    alleged, that there was error in charging the jury, that if Lincoln had personal property, he was not subject to arrest, and that, in such case, a discharge under the insolvent law is fraudulent. The act of assembly does not suppose, that there is fraud in the case mentioned by the judge. A very honest man may have considerable property, and yet be so pressed by debts, as to make it necessary to resort to the insolvent laws. A defendant is certainly liable to arrest, whether he has property or not, unless property be shown to the officer. Act of the 26th of 
      March, 1814. Purd. Dig. 278. Act of the 29th of January, 1820. Pam. L. 9. Act of the 28th of March, 1820. Pam. L. 155.
    Whether the petition and discharge were a continuation of the proceedings begun before Judge Stewart, and a compliance with the condition of the bond, were matters of law, to be decided by the court, and therefore erroneously submitted to the jury.
    
      Burnside, who was counsel for the defendant in error,
    did not argue the cause.
   The opinion of the court was delivered by

Gibson, J.

Lincoln, one of the defendants below, was arrested in vacation, and together with Raymond, the other defendant, gave bond under the act of the 28th of March, 1820, for his appearance at the next court, to surrender himself to prison, on failing to comply with all things required by law, to entitle him to a discharge under the insolvent laws. He did, in fact, appear and was discharged; but the judge who tried the cause, directed the jury, that if he had personal property sufficient to pay the debt, and yet suffered himself to be arrested, the arrest was illegal, and his application to the judge in vacation to be discharged from custody, on giving the bond in question, was fraudulent; much more so, if he procured himself to be arrested, and concealed his property to prevent the plaintiff from seizing it in execution; and this was put to the jury as a matter that might operate against the de-fence, which was set up on the ground of performance of the condition. I am not prepared to say, that the mere circumstance of having property at the time of the arrest, is evidence of fraud, even in the hearing between the debtor and his creditors; for a man may elect at any time to surrender his property to his creditors, with the view of having it distributed among them; and, to effect this, an arrest is not even necessary. But, granting that Lincoln’s conduct wTas fraudulent, up to the time when the bond was executed, and that he ought not to have succeeded in obtaining a final discharge; what answer does that furnish to an allegation of actual performance of the condition; particularly as respects Raymond, the surety, who could in no event be held liable beyond the exact letter of the contract, and who undertook only that Lincoln should appear at the next court, and actually obtain a discharge ? But, taking both defendants to be on a footing, I cannot see how fraud in the inception of the transaction, shall prevent their discharge from liability, by performing all they stipulated to perform. If a man gives a fraudulent bond, it is good against him; but it would be a severe construction, which should prevent him from ever discharging himself from the penalty, by performance of the condition. In Simms and another v. Slacum, 3 Cranch, 300, it was held, that fraud which is collateral to the condition, will not have the effect of preventing the obligation from being saved by performance of the condition. Simms was arrested, and to obtain the benefit of the rules, gave bond with a surety, according to the laws of Virginia, to confine himself to the prison bounds, and not to depai't thence till he should be discharged by due course of law. He afterwards procured a discharge, under the insolvent laws, fay fraud; and this was held not to be an escape, to work a forfeiture of the bond, although it was conceded, that Simms and the surety were to be considered as standing on the same ground. This is in point to show that actual performance is in all cases sufficient. In the case before us, the supposed fraud was introduced into the charge, in a way that had a direct tendency to mislead.

By the first section of the act of the 09th of January, 1820, a debtor who has not been arrested, may, in term time, petition for the benefit of the insolvent laws; and Lincoln had filed a petition at the April term preceding the arrest, in consequence of which he gave this bond. The court appointed the second day of June following, for hearing him and his creditors; at which time the matter was continued till Axigust term, and then finally dismissed. The bond before-mentioned was conditioned for Lincoln's appearance at August term, and he accordingly petitioned anew at that term, probably thinking that the condition of his bond required him to do so, and this may be the reason why he suffered his former petition to be dismissed. But his second petition, which is the one on which he was finally discharged, contains no recital of the arrest, of his having given bond, or of his having been discharged by a judge’s order in vacation; and on this part of the case, the judge directed the jury, that it was necessary that Lincoln should have been discharged, in the character of a debtor who had been arrested; but left to the jury to decide, whether the petition was in fact filed in continuation of the proceedings in vacation, under a direction, that a want of the recital of those proceedings, would not conclude the defendants, provided it should appear to have been omitted by mistake of the person who draughted the petition. I can discover no reason for such a recital in any case. If none but a debtor in confinement, or one who had been discharged on bail, were entitled to petition, a recital that the petitioner was in custody, or discharged on bail, would be necessary to bring the case within the purview of some of the insolvent acts. But, as any one may petition, who can show himself to be in insolvent circumstances, why recite proceedings in vacation, which are not at all necessary to enable the court to take cognizance of the petition? There might be good reason for it, if the mode of proceeding on the petition of a debtor discharged on bail, were different from that pursued in other cases; but, by the express provisions of the insolvent acts, the mode is the same in all cases. Then, if such recital be not necessary to the validity of the discharge, is it necessary to a valid performance of the condition of the bond? The defendants stipulated, that Lincoln should appear at the next court, to take the benefit of the insolvent laws or surrender himself to jail, on failing to comply with all things required by law to entitle him to a discharge; not that he should be discharged in any particular character, or on a petition in any particular form, or that he should file any petition at all; for I cannot see why a discharge in pursuance of the petition which was pending at the time of his arrest, would not have been a good performance of the condition. Why should it not? It would have produced exactly the same results, whether the petition were in the one form or in the other. Then, why require that the proceedings in court shall appear to be a continuation of the proceedings in vacation ? The discharge by the judge in vacation is not the inception of the application to the court, because the court may entertain a petition where there has been no discharge, or where the petitioner has never been arrested. A debtor may be arrested and discharged by a judge’s order more than once in the same vacation, as was the fact in this very case; and it is not refining too far to say, that this would, in strictness, require a separate petition for each arrest, as the same proceeding cannot have separate distinct beginnings. But the fair and reasonable construction of the act is, that the discharge in vacation is only for the ease of the debtor, by preventing the unnecessary hardship of imprisonment, until he can have an opportunity of obtaining the benefit arising from a cession of his property; and that the bond is merely a security for his appearance, at the next term, to make such cession, and claim its benefit. It never could be pretended, that the entering of bail to an action, would not be an available performance of the condition of the bail bond given to the sheriff, unless such bond were recited in the recognizance. It seems to me, then, that this bond exacted nothing but what is expressed by the letter of its condition, that Lincoln should appear at the succeeding term, and procure a discharge, which should exempt him from imprisonment, or surrender himself to jail; and on this point, also, I am of opinion, that the direction given by' the court below is erroneous.

Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.  