
    Owen & Longstreth v. Glover.
    If a debtor be taken on a ca. sa. in the District of Columbia, and give a prison-bounds bond, upon which also judgment is rendered against him, he may be retaken on the i original ca. sa. after the expiration of a year from the date of the bond, and committed to close custody in execution.
    
      Mr. Jones, for the defendant,
    moved the Court to quash the ca. sa. upon which the defendant was committed in execution. The original judgment was rendered in June, 1818. On the 20th of May, 1820, the defendant having been taken upon the ca. sa. issued upon that judgment, gave a prison-bounds bond. On the 6th of July, 1820, he broke the bounds, and the plaintiffs brought suit on the bond against him and his surety, in which suit judgment was, at the last term, rendered against him, but the suit is still pending against his surety. The year from the date of the prison-bounds bond having expired, the marshal, in obedience to the Act of Congress of the 24th of June, 1812, [2 Stat. at Large, 755,] recommitted him to close jail, upon the original ca. sa.
    
    
      Mr. J. Dunlop, for the plaintiff.
    The original arrest on the ca. sa. and the giving of the prison-bounds bond, are no satisfaction of the judgment. The plaintiff may retake his debtor, although he has recovered part of the debt in an action against the sheriff for an escape. They are concurrent remedies. Esp. N. P. 611; Bloomfield's case, 5 Co. 86. The plaintiff may have a fi. fa. against his debtor, and may proceed against the sheriff for an escape at the same time. Jackson v. Martin, 8 Johns. 366. So, in Maryland, the plaintiff may proceed upon the original judgment, or upon the supersedeas.
    
    
      Mr. Jones, contrd.
    
    The plaintiff can, in no case, have more than one execution at the same time upon the same judgment. In Maryland the plaintiff cannot have execution at the same time against the original debtor on the original judgment and on the supersedeas. The case in 8 Johnson, depends upon the statute of New York, which gives a fi. fa. after escape upon a ca. sa. After a prison-bounds bond given upon a ca. sa. there is no remedy under the Act of Congress, but a suit upon the bond.
   The Court

(Thruston, J., absent,)

decided that the marshal had the right to take the debtor under the original ca. sa. and that he cannot now be permitted to have the benefit of the prison bounds, the year having expired.  