delivered ti-ie opinion of the court.
Robert Bigbee was arrested upon a warrant charging him with the offense of shooting another person with intent to kill him. The justice of the peace before whom Bigbee was taken for examination took his bail in the sum of five thousand dollars to thereafter appear before him to answer said charge. Bigbee did not appear. Thereupon the justice indorsed upon the bail bond the word “forfeited,” with his signature there!o, and returned the bond to the clerk of the circuit court, where it was docketed, and summons was issued thereon, and judgment was obtained thereon against the sureties, and a part of the money collected. The *538county attorney who prosecuted in the justice’s and circuit courts, in the latter as assistant of the Commonwealth’s Attorney, claims thirty per cent, of the sum realized for prosecuting in the examining court, and fifteen per cent, additional for assisting the Commonwealth’s Attorney in the circuit court. The circuit court allowed the appellee both sums. The appellant, as trustee of the jury fund, has appealed.
Section 9 of article 3, chapter 5, General Statutes, provides, in substance, • that in all prosecutions for misdemeanors before any county judge, police judge, justice of the peace, &c., the county attorney shall receive thirty per cent, of all fines and forfeitures imposed or recovered in such prosecutions, provided, &c. The act of the 28th of April, 1884, makes it the duty of the county attorney to assist the Commonwealth’s Attorney in prosecutions in the circuit court, and fixes his compensation at fifteen per cent, of all judgments in favor of the Commonwealth for fines and forfeitures, &c.
The only jurisdiction in a case like this that the justice has is to take the bail bond, and if the defendant does not comply with its stipulations by appearing, &c., to indorse on the bond “forfeited,” and return it to the clerk of the circuit court, where it is proceeded on in every respect as other forfeitures on bail bonds that are taken in said ‘court. Except the taking of said bond and the indorsement thereon of the word “forfeited” by the justice, the jurisdictional power is exclusively in the circuit court. It is in that court that all proceedings against the bail must be had, irrespective of the amount of the bail *539bond. The justice has no jurisdiction over it whatever, except to take it and make the indorsement. This he does as an examining court to determine whether or not the accused shall be held to answer the charge in the circuit court. If he concludes to hold him over to answer said charge, the case, as well as the bail bond, is turned over to the circuit court. His power thereon ceases, and if he forfeits the bail bond, that also is turned over to the circuit clerk, and the justice’s power over that likewise ceases. The taking of this bond and the forfeiting of it are in no sense a prosecution before the justice. It only prepares the way for a prosecution by the circuit court in case of a forfeiture. The term fines and forfeitures, as mentioned in the General Statutes, of which the county attorney is entitled to thirty per cent., evidently means judgments for fines or on forfeitures rendered in the county judge’s or police judge’s or justice’s courts, and not thirty per cent, on merely preparatory proceedings for final action in another court. Were the rule otherwise, and as contended for by the appellee, it would cost the Commonwealth seventy per cent, of the money collected on such forfeitures for collecting it, which, unless the case was contested, would not require more than ten minutes of the attorney’s time, and but little legal skill or learning. Certainly the charge of such fees in like cases in private practice would be regarded as an extortion, and it is presumed that the law-makers never meant to authorize such charges against the Commonwealth. The statute, supra, should be so construed as not to allow such charges, unless it expressly allows *540them; but, as said, by a fair and reasonable construction of said statute, the fines and forfeitures therein mentioned refers to such as are prosecuted to judgment in said courts; and not to such as said courts have no jurisdiction of, except to send them to the circuit court for trial and judgment. It is clear that the appellee was only entitled to fifteen per cent, of the forfeiture collected.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to allow the appellee only fifteen per cent.