After stating the case: The practice of suspending judgment upon convictions in criminal cases and upon reasonable terms has so long prevailed in our courts that we would be loath to disturb it, except for the most convincing reason, supported by the clearest authority showing its illegality. We are satisfied, after the most careful examination of the question, that no such reason can be presented, and that no such precedent can be found. Recent decisions of this Court are strongly in favor of the power as existing in the court, when it is fairly and not unreasonably or oppressively exercised. In this case the learned and enlightened judge who presided and imposed the sentence proceeded with great caution after a final hearing of both sides, and we concur in his finding of fact and his conclusion that this was a proper case for the use of the power residing in him, in order to punish the defendant for a violation of the criminal law, which he had confessed in open court and of which he had been adjudged guilty, he having shown himself no longer entitled to the clemency of the court.
Before discussing the general question as to the power of the court to suspend judgment upon terms and conditions imposed at the time, it will be well to notice the objections made by the learned counsel for the defendant in his brief and argument. As we understand, they are the following:
1. If the court can suspend the judgment, it may do so indefinitely.
2. That suspension was really, and in law, conditioned upon the payment of costs only, and when the costs were paid, the power of the court to proceed further was terminated, for the condition annexed was no part of the punishment. (402)
3. The conditional terms imposed render the judgment uncertain, as in the case of alternative judgments.
4. The court has punished the defendant for what he has done since the suspension of the judgment, and not for the original offense, and for which he has not been tried upon indictment and convicted by a jury.
We do not think any of these objections are tenable. It would be useless for us, in this case, upon a suspension for only two years, to inquire what would be the legal effect of an indefinite suspension, as there has been no such exercise of the conceded power. It must not be overlooked that the suspension of judgment, upon terms expressed therein, at September Term, 1911, was entered with the defendant's implied assent at least, he being present and not objecting thereto.
This Court said in S. v. Crook, 115 N.C. 760, that such an order is not prejudicial, but favorable to a defendant, in that punishment is put off, with the chance of escaping it altogether; and it is presumed that he was present and assented thereto, if he did not ask for it as a measure of relief from impending punishment. The Court also expressed some *Page 322 surprise at the suggestion that the rights of a defendant are infringed or his interests impaired by allowing him to escape for the present the toils of the law, by suspending immediate action and affording him an opportunity for reformation as a basis for permanent clemency, instead of requiring him at once to undergo the punishment of the law for the offense of which he had been convicted. And we repeat, that it is strange he should complain of the merciful consideration which the law thus extends to him.
The practice of suspending judgment upon terms prescribed has been sanctioned in our courts for a long time, and it seems to have been recognized in England, for in 4 Bl. Com., 394, it is said that "A reprieve (from reprende, to take back) is the withdrawing of a sentence for an interval of time, whereby the execution is suspended. This (403) may be, first, ex arbitro judicis, either before or after judgment, as where the judge is not satisfied with the verdict, or the evidence is suspicious, or the indictment is insufficient, or he is doubtful whether the offense be within clergy, or, sometimes, if it be a small felony, or any favorable circumstance appear in the criminal's character, in order to give room to apply to the Crown for either an absolute or conditional pardon." And to the same effect we find the law thus stated in Chitty's Cr. Law, 75: "The more usual course is for a discretionary reprieve to proceed from the judge himself, who, from his acquaintance with all the circumstances of the trial, is most capable of judging when it is proper. The power of granting this respite belongs, of common right, to every tribunal which is invested with authority to award execution. And this power exists even in cases of high treason, though the judge should be very prudent in its exercise." "At common law every court invested with power to award execution in criminal cases has inherent power to suspend the sentence." Clark's Cr. Pro., 496.
In Com. v. Dowdican's Bail, 115 Mass. 133, it was held to be proper and within the power of the court, after conviction in a criminal case, "when the court is satisfied that, by reason of extenuating circumstances, or of the pendency of a question of law in a like case before a higher court, or other sufficient cause, public justice does not require an immediate sentence, to order, with the consent of the defendant and the attorney for the Commonwealth, and upon such terms as the court in its discretion may impose, that the indictment be laid on file; and this practice has been recognized by statute. Such an order is not equivalent to a final judgment, or to a nolle prosequi or discontinuance, by which the case is put out of court; but is a mere suspending of active proceedings in the case, which dispenses with the necessity of entering formal continuances upon the dockets, and leaves it within the power of the court *Page 323 at any time, upon the motion of either party, to bring the case forward and pass any lawful order or judgment therein. Neither the order laying the indictment on file nor the payment of costs, therefore, in any of the four cases, entitled the defendant to be finally discharged." Sometimes the judge reprieves, said Lord Hale, "as where he is (404) not satisfied with the verdict, or the evidence is uncertain, or the indictment is insufficient, or doubtful whether within clergy. Also when favorable or extenuating circumstances appear and when youths are convicted of their first offense. And these arbitrary reprieves may be granted or taken off by the justices of gaol delivery, although their sessions be adjourned or finished, and this by reason of common usage." (2 Hale P. C., ch. 58, p. 412.)
Our courts, of course, can only act in such matters during their sessions, and not in vacation. The power of suspending or respiting the sentence belonged of common right to every tribunal invested with authority to award execution in a criminal case. People v. Court of Sessions,141 N.Y., 292, citing 1 Chitty Cr. Law (1 Ed.), 617, 758; Bishop's New Cr. Pro., sec. 1299; Com. v. Maloney, 145 Mass. 245; 2 Hawkins Pleas of the Crown, p. 657, sec. 8. It was held in Fults v. State, 2 Sneed, 232, that the courts have control of their judgments in criminal cases, so far as to suspend the execution thereof on sufficient reason appearing. And if such suspension be had upon application of defendant, it constitutes no error of which he can take advantage. The courts will be presumed to have exercised such discretion in a proper case.
We have already seen that there is a presumption that the order of suspension was made with the defendant's consent, if not at his request. The record here evidently implies that the order in question was made at defendant's solicitation, as an act of mercy to him, so that he might qualify himself by his good behavior to receive further clemency from the court, and thus avoid the rigor of the law. Allen v. State, 8 Tenn. 294;S. v. Addy, 43 N.J. Law, 113. In the case last cited the Court said: "It would seem that it is stating the matter too broadly to assert that it is always the imperative duty of a court to render judgment upon a conviction of crime, unless some legal proceeding for review be interposed. Considerations of public policy may induce the court to stay its hand." S. v. Hilton, 151 N.C. 687, does not controvert these views, but is in perfect harmony with them. The capital (405) distinction between the two cases is that in Hilton's case, the court had previously investigated the conduct of the defendant, and after finding as a fact that he had fully complied with the condition of the suspension, he was discharged, while here, unfortunately for the defendant, the court has found the other way, after hearing both sides: that is, *Page 324 it has declared, after hearing the evidence, that the defendant has sold liquor unlawfully, in clear violation of the terms of suspension, to which he agreed.
In the Hilton case the Court fully recognized the existence of a valid power in the court to suspend judgment on condition that the good behavior of the defendant, and his obedience to the law, be shown by him from term to term, for a reasonable period, citing many authorities to sustain the ruling by which it approved the long-standing practice of our tribunals in this respect. Justice Hoke, for the Court, thus comments upon this method of procedure in our criminal courts: "In this State, as shown in S. v. Crook, 115 N.C. 760, the power to suspend judgment and later impose sentence has been somewhat extended in its scope, so as to allow a suspension of judgment on payment of costs, or other reasonable condition, or continuing the prayer for judgment from term to term to afford defendant opportunity to pay the cost or to make some compensation to the party injured, to be considered in the final sentence, or requiring him to appear from term to term, and for a reasonable period of time, and offer testimony to show good faith in some promise of reformation or continued obedience to the law. These latter instances of this method of procedure seem to be innovations upon the exercise of the power to suspend judgment as it existed at common law; and while they are well established with us by usage, the practice should not be readily or hastily enlarged and extended to occasions which might result in unusual punishment or unusual methods of administering the criminal law." He refers to the cases hereinbefore cited, and also toS. v. Bennett, 20 N.C. 43; Com. v. Maloney, 145 Mass. 205; Gibson v. State, 68 Miss. 241; Ex parte Williams, 25 Fla. 310; Revisal of (406) 1905, secs. 1293 and 1294. See, also, S. v. White, 117 N.C. 804; S. v. Crook, 115 N.C. 760; S. v. Sanders, 153 N.C. 624.
There was no indefinite suspension of judgment in this case, but only for a definite time with the consent of the defendant, upon a condition which he impliedly promised to perform, but which he most flagrantly disregarded. We need not, therefore, decide upon the lawfulness of an indefinite suspension, for we have no such case. There was no abuse of the court's discretion, and this is a sufficient answer to the first contention.
Nor has the second any greater force. The payment of the costs was not a full compliance with the terms of the suspension, and did not take away the power of the court to proceed to judgment, if it found that the defendant had not complied with the condition, but, on the contrary, had become, since the date of the judgment, a common retailer of liquors, in open violation and defiance of the law. The next contention, that *Page 325 the condition rendered the judgment uncertain, as in the case of alternative judgments, cannot be sustained. The judgment is certain and definite in its terms, and does not impose alternative duties or obligations.
Nor can it be well argued that the judge had, by the judgment, punished the defendant for his subsequent conduct. This is a misapprehension of its legal effect. He has simply punished him for the crime he had confessed, because he has violated the terms upon which clemency was impliedly promised. But this is merely the reason for awarding punishment in the original case, and is no part of the offense for which it was inflicted.
This very point was urged in the similar case of Sylvester v. State,65 N. H., 193, where the defendant was indicted for the illegal sale of liquor, and the mittimus was ordered to be stayed "while he does not sell liquor," and it was held that "the enforcement of the judgment of mittimus was not a punishment for subsequent offenses, or for breach of the condition on which execution was stayed."
It must be clear that the defendant was not entitled to a jury trial to determine whether or not he had violated the conditions upon which the judgment had been suspended. He was not on trial for any new offense, nor for any offense whatever. When the judgment (407) was suspended defendant assumed the obligation of showing, to the satisfaction of the court, from time to time, that he had demeaned himself as a good citizen and was worthy of judicial clemency. Whether or not he had so demeaned himself was not an issue of fact to be submitted to a jury, but a question of fact to be passed upon by the court. It was a matter to be determined by the sound discretion of the court, and the exercise of that discretion, in the absence of gross abuse, cannot be reviewed here.
S. v. Sanders, 153 N.C. 627, cited by the defendant in support of the position that the defendant must have been convicted of the subsequent offense and that the record of conviction is the only competent evidence of the violation of the condition, is not in point. The Court, in that case, was deciding as to the forfeiture of a recognizance given for a defendant's appearance, where the statute prescribes the method of proving a breach, that is, by the record of a conviction. It was not a proceeding to enforce a former suspended judgment by punishing the defendant.
The power to suspend judgment exists, but should be exercised fairly and reasonably, so as not to deprive the defendant of the right to assign errors and review the proceedings in the court below, if he desires to do so, and with due regard to his other rights. He must not be oppressed *Page 326 or unduly burdened by the suspension. There was no abuse of discretion in this case, nor did the court exceed its authority. The suspension was made with the consent of the defendant, and for his benefit, and he has now no reason to complain, having violated his own voluntary promise to demean himself as a good citizen should do.
No error.
Cited: S. v. Tripp, 168 N.C. 152.
(408)