Sec. 535, chap. D. of the criminal code provides that: “ No costs shall be paid from the county treasury in any ■case of prosecution for a misdemeanor, or for secmity to keep the peace, except as provided in section five hundred and forty-one.
The following section (536) provides expressly for the payment of costs by the county, incurred upon examination before a magistrate on complaint of a felony, whether the accused be held to answer in court, or discharged. It *308also makes it the duty of the county commissioners to disallow any item, in whole or in part, of any bill of costs in such cases that shall be found to be unlawfully or needlessly incurred. And also where it shall appear that the complaint upon which such examination was made was for a felony, when it ought to have been for a misdemeanor only, the county commissioners may, in their discretion, disallow the entire bill or any part thereof. This is the only matter arising under the provisions of these sections that is left to the discretion of the commissioners. The reason of this provision of the statute must be apparent to every person of experience, and is fully discussed in and illustrated by the case of Boggs v. Washington Cownty, 10 Neb., 297. But the plain object and intent of the legislature in enacting the two sections in question was to fix and declare the liability of the county for costs lawfully and properly earned in the examination, before magistrates, of persons properly charged with felony, and to declare the non-liability of the county for costs incurred upon the trial or examination of persons charged with the commission of misdemeanors only, and in peace warrant cases.
Sec. 541 provides for the furnishing by magistrates and clerks of courts to the county clerk of their respective counties, of certified copies of uncollectible cost bills, in misdemeanor and peace warrant cases. And that, at the first meeting of the county commissioners in the months of April and October of each year, if it shall appear from the records and files of the county clerk’s office that the receipts into the county treasury from the sources mentioned in the preceding section — that is to say, the costs and proceeds of jail labor, mentioned in section 540, and required to be credited to the county general fund — are in excess of the amount allowed to be paid from said treasury in the same time for costs in criminal cases, including the sums paid for keeping and transporting prisoners in criminal *309cases, said commissioners shall make an order that a sum equal to such excess be appropriated from the county general fund for the payment of cost bills filed as aforesaid, in misdemeanor and peace warrant causes, or so much thereof as shall be necessary to pay all such bills or parts thereof as may be found lawful and just, etc.
The provisions of this section (541) are for the benefit of officers and witnesses earning fees in misdemeanor and peace warrant causes, and those only. It provides for paying to them any balance which may be in the general fund of the county treasury arising from a certain source, but it makes no provision for the payment of fees or costs in felony cases, for the probable reason that they had been provided for in section 536. Their full payment is assured, while the payment of the former class is contingent and uncertain.
While we agree with counsel in the propositions, that neither the state or federal governments ever pay costs, and that the liability of counties to pay costs in criminal cases cannot arise by implication, nor in the absence of an express statute, yet we think that the statute plainly provides that the county shall pay the costs legally earned by magistrates and sheriffs in cases of felony before justices of the peace, except in cases where the complaint ought to have been for a misdemeanor only, and it gives the county board the right to pay costs in their discretion, even then.
Counsel for plaintiff in error in the brief, says: “ The greater part of the charges of these officers were for issuing and serving subpoenas on witnesses. The justice’s transcript does not show who, or how many of these witnesses were for the state, or for the accused, nor whether any of them were for the state. Now at common law each party, except the sovereignty, was liable for his own costs; to what law can we be referred that,makes the state or county liable for the costs in procuring the attendance of witnesses on behalf of the accused? We know *310of no such law; but it must not be forgotten that this is an error case, and that it is with the action of the district' court that we have to deal, and not with that of the county commissioners. Had the plaintiff in error made proper and timely application in the court below, the defendant in error would doubtless have been required to show that the costs claimed by him were incurred on the part of the prosecution, .and not on the part of the defense. All presumptions are in favor of the correctness of the judgment, and to attack it for this cause it must be shown affirmatively that part or all of these services were rendered in procuring testimony for the defense.
The statute allows the sheriffs, as fees, twenty-five cents for serving a subpoena on a witness, and twenty-five cents (each) for all copies of certain enumerated writs and process, including subpoenas. Whether these copies were necessary is, we think, a question upon which the sheriff’s return must be taken as conclusive. The law allows the justice fifty cents for each adjournment in a cause or examination before him. It draws no distinction between adjournments, and we know of no rule by which we can draw any.
As to the other items of cost complained of, we do not deem it necessary for the purposes of this case to examine them in detail, but content ourselves by saying that we do not think the objections to them well taken.
It cannot be denied that the items of costs for issuing, copying, and serving subpoenas in this examination amount to quite a sum, but it must be borne in mind that it was an extraordinary case in respect to the number of witnesses, exceeding in that regard any case within the somewhat extended experience and observation of the writer, and it has not been suggested in this case but that they were all subpoenaed and examined in good faith, or that their testimony *311was not necessary to elicit the truth and meet the demands of justice.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.