1. criminal law: appeal by the state. The statute (5094) gives tbe right of appeal to the State as well as to the defendant; and this right exists where the judgment is in favor of the __ . . . . # . State as well as where it is against it. lha.t *142is to say, the right given is general; and, if the fine assessed is not, in the opinion of those prosecuting and acting for the State, sufficient, an appeal may be taken as well as where the defendant is acquitted.
2. — plea of guilty. And, in such a case,-it makes no difference that the defendant has plead guilty. State v. Kraft, 10 Iowa, 330.
Even though the plea should not be withdrawn in the District Court before judgment (§ 4T1T), inquiry can still be made into the circumstances to settle and fix the amount of the fine or punishment. State v. Rollet, 6 Iowa, 535. And we have the less hesitation in applying these rules to this case, from the fact that the plea and judgment were entered in the absence of the prosecutor, and before the day fixed for trial. State v. Green & Mann, 16 Iowa, 239.
To entitle the State to appeal, it is not necessary to show prejudice any more than it is for the defendant in the exercise of the same right. If it does not appear on the hearing, the judgment appealed from should not be disturbed; but this has nothing to do with the right of appeal in the first instance. The cause came up for trial de novo, and the doctrine to which counsel refer has application to proceedings in. courts for the correction of errors.
3_receipt °fflne. Nor does the receipt of the fine in this instance, by the county treasurer, amount to an acceptance of the adjudication within the meaning of the cases and doctrine relied upon by the appellees. The treasurer is not a party to the suit, accepting the amount of the judgment. He knows nothing about the circumstances, and has no discretion left when the money is paid him by the justice.
*1434 _consti. tutkmai law. *142We are, then, finally, to inquire whether the 'statute, giving to the State the right of appeal, is in conflict with *143section eleven, article one, of the Constitution. qqqs article, after providing for the trial of offenses of this character before a justice of the peace, etc., saves “to the defendant the right of appeal.” And this saving to the defendant, it is insisted, is by implication a denial of the right to the State. We know of no rule of construction justifying this conclusion. It is illogical to say that, because the General Assembly cannot deprime the defendant of the right, therefore it cannot confer the same right upon the State. We admit the proposition that affirmative words may imply a negative of that which is not affirmed, as strongly as if expressed ; as also that if a thing is limited to be done in a particular manner, this includes the assertion that it shall not be done otherwise. But this doctrine has nothing to do with the question now before us. The Constitution contains no limitation upon the law-making power upon the subject. But for the saving provision of the Constitution, it would be competent for the legislature to make the judgment of the justice final; and the recognition-or assertion of this right, and a denial of power in the legislature to take it away, is all that was intended.
There is nothing affirmed in conflict with the statute in question. If the Constitution had declared that the State might have this class of cases reviewed by writ of error or certiorari, there might have been some ground for appellees’ argument, that an appeal could not be authorized. Such a case woixld come more nearly within the rule stated, but it has no application, in view of well-settled rules of construction, to the enactment in question. As to these rules, see McCormick v. Rusch, 15 Iowa, 127; Morrison v. Springer, Id., 304; Duncombe v. Prindle, 12 Id., 1.
The order striking the cause from the docket is
Beversed.