Research

Scope and Content Note

These rules were entered on motion by the plaintiff's attorney. Defendants not required to file special bail endorsed the writ, whereupon the court rule entered the defendant's (fictitious) appearance. Other rules direct the sheriff to rearrest a defendant who had not put in special bail within twenty days as required. Each entry gives the title of the cause, the rule, the sheriff's fee, and the name of the plaintiff's attorney.

The volumes in this series contain common rules for the appearance of defendants served with writs of capias ad respondendum. The rules were entered on motion by the plaintiff's attorney. In actions in which the defendant was not required to file special bail, the rule of the court enters his appearance up on his endorsement of the writ which was served and returned by the sheriff. In actions in which bail was required but the arrested defendant failed to put in special bail within twenty days, as he had undertaken to do, the plaintiff's attorney moved the court for a common rule directing the sheriff to arrest the defendant again. The penalty against the sheriff for failing to compel the putting in of bail was attachment of his property for the amount of the judgment awarded to the plaintiff.

These volumes record the rules entered in these two situations. When the defendant was required to put in special bail and did so by the time specified for return of the writ of capias, the entry is simply cepi corpus, "I took the body." When the sheriff was unable to find the defendant, or the defendant did not reside within his bailiwick, the entry is non est (inventus), "he is not (found)." In causes where the defendant was a corporation, a writ of summons was served because a corporation, being a fictitious person, could not be arrested.

Each entry in these books gives the title of the cause, the rule entering the defendant's appearance or directing the sheriff to make a second arrest, the sheriff's fee in each case, and the name of the plaintiff's attorney. As noted above, in place of a rule the entry may simply state that the defendant was arrested (and that he put in bail) or was not found.