ESCAPE.
An escape is tho deliverance of a person who is lawfully imprisoned,
out of prison, before such a person is entitled to such deliverance by
law. 5 Mass. 310.
2. It will be proper to consider, first, what is a lawful imprisonment; and, secondly, the different kinds of escapes.
3.
When a man is imprisoned in a proper place under the process of a court
having jurisdiction in the case, he is lawfully imprisoned,
notwithstanding the proceedings may be irregular; but if the court has
not jurisdiction the imprisonment is unlawful, whether the process be
regular or otherwise. Bac. Ab. Escape. in civil cases, A 1; 13 John.
378; 5 John. 89; 1 Cowen, 309 8 Cowen, 192; 1 Root, R. 288.
4.
Escapes are divided into voluntary and negligent; actual or
constructive; civil and criminal and escapes on mesne process and
execution.
5.
- 1. A voluntary escape is the giving to a prisoner, voluntarily, any
liberty not authorized by law. 5 Mass . 310; 2 Chipm. 11. Letting a
prisoner confined under final process, out of prison for any, even the
shortest time, is an escape, although he afterwards return; 2 Bl. Rep.
1048; 1 Roll. Ab. 806; and this may be, (as in the case of imprisonment
under a ca. sa.) although an officer may accompany him. 3 Co. 44 a
Plowd. 37; Hob. 202; 1 Bos. & Pull. 24 2 Bl. Rep. 1048.
6.
The effect of a voluntary escape in a civil case, when the prisoner is
confined under final process, is to discharge the debtor, so that he
cannot be retaken by the sheriff; but he may be again arrested if he was
confined only on mesne process. 2 T. R. 172; 2 Barn. & A. 56. And
the plaintiff may retake the prisoner in either case. In a criminal
case, on the contrary, the officer not only has a right to recapture his
prisoner, but it is his duty to do so. 6 Hill, 344; Bac. Ab. Escape in
civil cases, C.
7.
- 2. A negligent escape takes place when the prisoner goes at large,
unlawfully, either because the building or prison in which he is
confined is too weak to hold him, or because the keeper by carelessness
lets him go out of prison.
8.
The consequences of a negligent escape are not so favorable to the
prisoner confined under final process, as they are when the escape is
voluntary, because in this case, the prisoner is to blame. He may
therefore be retaken.
9. - 3. The escape is actual, when the prisoner in fact gets out of prison and unlawfully regains his liberty.
10.
- 4. A constructive escape takes place when the prisoner obtains more
liberty than the law allows, although he still remains in confinement
The following cases are examples of such escapes: When a man marries his
prisoner. Plowd. 17; Bac. Ab. Escape, B 3. If an underkeeper be taken
in execution, and delivered at the prison, and neither the sheriff nor
any authorized person be there to receive him. 5 Mass. 310. And when the
keeper of a prison made one of the prisoners confined for a debt a
turnkey, and trusted him with the keys, it was held that this was a
constructive escape. 2 Mason, 486.
11.
Escapes in civil cases are, when the prisoner is charged in execution
or on mesne process for a debt or duty, and not for a criminal offence,
and he unlawfully gains his liberty. In this case, we have seen, the
prisoner may be retaken, if the escape have not been voluntary; and that
he may be retaken by the plaintiff when the escape has taken place
without his fault, whether the defendant be confined in execution or
not; and that the sheriff may retake the prisoner, who has been
liberated by him, when he was not confined on final process.
12.
Escapes in criminal cases take place when a person lawfully in prison,
charged with a crime or under sentence, regains his liberty unlawfully.
The prisoner being to blame for not submitting to the law, and in
effecting his escape, may be retaken whether the escape was voluntary or
not. And he may be indicted, fined and imprisoned for so escaping. See
Prison.
13.
Escape on mesne process is where the prisoner is not confined on final
process, but on some other process issued in the course of the
proceedings, and unlawfully obtains his liberty, such escape does not
make the officer liable, provided that on the return day of the writ,
the prisoner is forthcoming.
14.
Escape on final process is when the prisoner obtains his liberty
unlawfully while lawfully confined, and under an execution or other
final decree. The officer is then, in general, liable to the plaintiff
for the amount of the debt.
ESCAPE, WARRANT.
A warrant issued in England against a person who being charged in
custody in the king's bench or Fleet prison, in execution or mesne
process, escapes and goes at large. Jacob's L. D. h. t.
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