State v. Coats

OPINION OF THE COURT.

ROBERTS, C. J. —

G. W. Bledsoe was the prosecuting witness in an information filed by the District Attorney, before a Justice of the Peace, against John Coats and his wife, wherein they were charged with conducting a disorderly house within three hundred yards of a school house. Upon trial the defendants were acquitted, and the Justice ■of the Peace found that the prosecution was instituted “maliciously and without probable cause,” and taxed the costs against Bledsoe and ordered him committed until the costs.should be paid. Prom the judgment taxing him with the costs, Bledsoe appealed to the District Court. In the District Court the State filed a motion to dismiss the ■appeal, on the ground that the District Court was without jurisdiction to try the case, because no appeal could be taken from, the judgment of the Justice of the Peace. The Court overruled the motion and called the case for trial, and the State offering no evidence, a judgment was entered discharging Bledsoe from the payment of the costs •of the case. Prom such judgment the State appeals, and predicates error upon two grounds, viz: (1) The imposition of costs, upon the prosecuting witness, resting’ solely within the discretion of the Justice of the Peace, no appeal lies to review such discretion, and (2) upon appeal, in such a case, the burden was upon the appellant, and in the absence of any evidence it was the duty of the Court to •enter judgment fox the State.

1 Before considering the question stated, it is probably advisable to notice a question of practice, presented by the record in this case, but not discussed by.counsel. The ■case is docketed in this Court, and was apparently so docketed in the District Court, as the “State of New Mexico v. John Coats, et ah,” the defendants in the original case. This is improper. The case against John Coats was disposed of by the judgment of the Justice of the Peace, and when he taxed the costs against Bledsoe, the judgment therein became a judgment on behalf of the State against said Bledsoe, and so it should appear in subsequent proceedings, involving such judgment.

Appellant’s brief is devoteá chiefly to a discussion of the first ground upon which error is predicated. The section of the statute, under which the Justice of the Peace imposed the costs of the case upon the prosecuting witness^ reads as follows:—

Section 3, chap.- 61, S. L. 1907.) ‘‘Upon the trial of any criminal ease, whenever the Court or Justice of the Peace shall be satisfied that any such case has been instituted maliciously, or without probable cause, the Court may in its discretion tax the costs therein against the prosecuting witness, in which event such witness shall stand committed until such costs be fully paid.”

2 The argument is advanced, that the imposition of costs upon the prosecuting witness, resting in the discretion- of the Justice of the Peace, such discretion will not bé reviewed by an Appellate Court. This would be true, if the-Appellate Court simply reviewed the judgment of the Justice of the Pe'ace'and reversed or affirmed the same, but under our statute, (sec. 3317, C. L. 1897), the-case, in the District Court, must be tried de novo, and the District Court necessarily is -required to enter its own independent judgment. This being true, the discretion conferred upon the Justice of the Peace by the section of the statute first quoted, is necessarily transferred 'to the District Court by the appeal. . To establish the contrary rule, the State relies upon the following quotation from 11 Oye. 272:

“In North Carolina, where the Court decides whether grounds exist for imposing costs on the prosecutor, its-finding that the facts warrant the imposition, is conclusive.”

But that this rule applies only to appeals from the District Court to the Supreme Court, is clearly shown by the-North Carolina Supreme Court in. the case of State v. Hamilton, 106 N. C. 660:

“Section 738 empowers the Court to imprison the proseeutor for nonpayment of costs, if it shall adjudge that the prosecution was frivolous and malicious. This is held constitutional. State v. Cannady, 78 N. C. 539. These findings of fact by the Court below have been repeatedly held conclusive and not reviewable by this Court on appeal. State v. Adams, 85 N. C. 560; State v. Owen, 87 N. C. 565; State v. Dunn, 95 N. C. 697. Though such findings of fact by a Justice of the Peace are reviewable by the Superior Court on appeal. State v. Murdock, 85 N. C. 598; State v. Powell, 86 N. C. 640.”

By sec. 3305, C. L. 1897, Bledsoe had the right to appeal to the District Court from the judgment against him. This being true, the District Court properly overruled the motion to dismiss the appeal.

3 As the case was triable de novo on appeal, the burden-was upon the State to show that the prosecution was - instituted “maliciously or without probable cause,” and the State failing to offer any evidence upon the trial, the District Court properly dismissed the case and discharged the prosecuting witness.

Finding no errors in the record, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed, and it is so ordered.