Opinion,
Mr. Chief Justice Paxson :One John J. Jones was indicted in the Quarter Sessions of Luzerne county for a misdemeanor. The jury acquitted him of the offence with which he was charged, and directed that the prosecutor, W. B. Kishbaugh, pay the costs. On December 7, 1889, the said court sentenced Kishbaugh “ to pay the costs of prosecution, or give security to the sheriff to do so within ten days, and to stand committed until this sentence be complied with.” On the same day the said Kishbaugh presented his petition to the Court of Common Pleas praying “ that he be permitted, in order to procure his discharge, to give bond to the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, conditioned that he appear at the next Court of Common Pleas of said county, and then and there present his petition for the benefit of the insolvent laws,” etc. On the same day, upon the presentation of this petition and bond, the court discharged the petitioner from the custody of the sheriff. The countj'- of Luzerne took this appeal from said order, in order to test the question whether a prosecutor, who has been legally sentenced by the Court of Quarter Sessions to pay the costs of prosecution, can be discharged without such payment and without any imprisonment whatever, upon filing a petition and bond to take the benefit of the insolvent laws.
We have no decision of this court which rules this question, and the few decisions of the Courts of Common Pleas throughout the state are not uniform. We must turn, therefore, to the acts of assembly, and see what is there written.
*472The forty-seventh section of the act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 740, provides:
“ The Court of Common Pleas of an}*- county in which any person may be confined by sentence or order of any court of this commonwealth, until he restore any stolen goods or chattels or pay the value thereof, or in which any person may be confined for non-payment of any fine, or of the costs of prosecution, or upon conviction of fornication or bastardy, and for no other cause, shall have power to discharge such person from such confinement, on his making application and conforming to the provisions hereinbefore directed in the case of insolvent debtors: provided that, where such person shall have been sentenced to the payment of a fine, or after a conviction of fornication and bastardy, he shall not be entitled to make such application until after he shall have been in actual confinement, in pursuance of such sentence, for a period not less than three months.”
It will thus be seen that under this section the’ only two instances in which imprisonment for three months is required are, (a) where the person has been sentenced to pay a fine; and (5) where he is under conviction of fornication or bastardy. These exceptions necessarily exclude all others. A sentence to pay the costs of prosecution cannot be regarded as the equivalent of a fine, within the meaning of this section. The two subjects are referred to distinctly and separately. Aside from this, they are essentially different in their nature. A man under sentence to pay a fine is a transgressor. He is either a criminal, or has violated some law. A man who is merely sentenced to pay the costs of prosecution is not a criminal, nor has he broken any law. He may have made a mistake in bringing a prosecution, or he may be the victim of the blunder or prejudices of a jury. In any event, there is nothing in this section which requires him to undergo three months’ or any other term of imprisonment as a prerequisite to his discharge under the insolvent laws.
It was urged, however, that the use of the words “ confined by sentence ” implies imprisonment. There may be some force in this, if we consider these words literally. Yet, in contemplation of law, a man is “ confined ” the moment he is handed over to the sheriff under sentence. It might not be straining *473a point to hold that the doors of the prison must first close upon him before he can apply for his discharge under the insolvent laws. But cui bono? What practical good would result from the application of such a technical rule ? Why hold that the prison bolts must first close behind him, if the sheriff is obliged the next moment to throw them back in obedience to the mandate of the insolvent laws ? The effect would merely be to put the county to a needless expense, and subject to useless mortification a man who has violated no law, who may be an honest, law-abiding citizen, and guilty of no crime but poverty.
The forty-eighth section of the same act (1836) provides:
“Every person who shall be confined in any jail of this commonwealth, in execution or otherwise, for any debt, sum of money, fine or forfeiture, not exceeding in amount the sum of fifteen dollars, exclusive of costs, and who shall have remained so confined for the space of thirty days, shall be discharged from such confinement, if there be no other cause of confinement, and shall not be liable to imprisonment again for the same cause: provided, that the estate and effects of such person shall, notwithstanding such discharge, be liable for such debt or other cause of imprisonment in like manner as before.”
This is a substantial re-enactment of the act of March 27, 1789, 2 Sm. L. 483. The case of Commonwealth v. Long, 5 Binn. 489, was decided under this last-named act, and it was held that the construction of the act is this: that the prisoner is not entitled to a discharge unless he has remained in confinement for the fine thirty days beyond the time adjudged for imprisonment, and, when ho has remained for thirty days, he is entitled to a discharge both as respects the fine and costs. But, neither the fine nor costs are remitted. If the criminal has property, his property is liable for both. We might well say the same in regard to the forty-eighth section of the act of 1836. In the cases enumerated, it entitles a man to his discharge after undergoing thirty days’ imprisonment, without passing through the insolvent court. It throws no light upon the question we are considering. Nor has any other act of assembly boon called to our attention which affects it.
While the learned counsel for the appellant contend that some imprisonment is necessary before a discharge can be had *474under the insolvent laws, we have not been informed as to what extent confinement is required. No law has been pointed out which defines the term. But it was urged that he must undergo a reasonable imprisonment. What is a reasonable imprisonment? No act of assembly has defined it. We fail to see any reason in public morals or public policy why a man under sentence for costs should not be entitled to the merciful provisions of the insolvent laws as fully as any other citizen; and, as we find no law to prevent it, the court below was right in ordering the’ petitioner’s discharge.
Judgment affirmed.