174 Iowa 731 | Iowa | 1916
The judgment is “that the defendants H. A. A. Edmond and Bertha Edmond each pay a fine in the sum of $300 and the costs of prosecution, and in default of payment of the said fine and costs that the defendants, and each of them, be committed . . . until said fine and costs are paid, but not to exceed ninety days.” It is conceded that “the fines are assessed separately against Bertha Edmond and plaintiff,” and the exact complaint is that “the penalty is joint, and unless each pays the fine assessed against him or her, both must suffer the penalty of imprisonment.” Starting, then, with the premise that each defendant was fined as an individual, it would seem to follow that the further order that, on default of payment of “said fine,” each be committed “until said fine is paid,” refers to the fine which it is conceded was imposed, a fine upon each as an individual, and that it creates an individual penalty for failing to pay an individual fine. To hold that both are to be detained until each of the two fines is paid, is to disregard that the detention is to be until “said fine” is paid; that “said fine” has a clear antecedent to refer to, to wit, the only fine that was imposed — a separate fine — and that it would be utterly unreasonable and strained to disregard the express reference to the only fine imposed and to substitute therefor one that never was assessed. No torturing of English can avoid the deduction that, where a writing fines two, separately, and the same writing specifies a penalty in aid' of collecting of “said fine,” the separate fine declared in the
Had the judgment ordered, in terms, that H. A. A. Edmond be committed until the fine of $300 imposed on him, and costs, were paid, and then made the same order as to Bertha Edmond, this application would probably not have been made. The essence of it seems to be a claim that, where needless repetitions are avoided, language which is susceptible to reasonable interpretation without such repetitions shall be construed into working a manifest absurdity and injustice.
While the sentence against each must be separate, it does not follow that two distinct judgments must be written up. It is immaterial that the sentences appear in the same judgment, if they are separately passed upon each of the prisoners. State v. Hollenscheit, 61 Mo. 302, 303,
In our opinion, the petitioner should be reminded to the custody of the defendant in order that the warrant of commitment now in his hands may be executed in conformity to its terms, and it is so ordered.
Writ denied and petition dismissed.