At Fall Term, 1896, the solicitor entered a nol pros., and Norwood, J., rendered judgment against the county of Burke for costs incurred in the Superior Court, but not for costs in the justice's court, to which judgment against the county of Burke for costs in the Superior Court the State and county commissioners of Burke excepted and appealed. This is a prosecution commenced before a justice of the peace, in a matter where the justice had final jurisdiction (for entering on land after being forbidden) and carried to the Superior Court by appeal. In the Superior Court the solicitor for the State entered a nol pros., and the judge entered judgment against the county for the costs *Page 544 that had accrued in the Superior Court after the appeal, but not for what had accrued before the justice of the peace. To this judgment the commissioners excepted and appealed. (868) It was contended in support of the judgment of the Court, that sections 739, 740, 743, 744 and 745 of The Code should be considered in connection with section 895, relied on by the counsel for the commissioners, in support of their contention that the judgment was erroneous, and it was contended that when considered together they sustained the judgment of the Court appealed from. And upon an examination of these sections, we find there is an apparent inconsistency in them. But they have all been considered and construed in S. v. Massey, 104 N.C. 877, and in Merrimon v. Commissioners, 106 N.C. 369. And as there construed, it was error to tax the county of Burke with any part of this cost. There is error, and the judgment appealed from, so far as it taxes the county of Burke with any part of this cost, is reversed.
JUDGMENT REVERSED.
Cited: S. v. Horne, ante, 855; Guilford v. Commissioners, 120 N.C. 27;S. v. Morgan, ib., 565; Clerk's Office v. Commissioners, 121 N.C. 30;Garner v. Worth, 122 N.C. 255.