18 Wis. 166 | Wis. | 1864
By the Court,
As we understand the position of respondent’s counsel, the only ground for claiming that the county is liable for the costs is, that section 77, chap. 133, R. S., imposes that liability. That section provides that when any prosecution instituted in the name of this state, for breaking any law of this state, shall fail, or where the defendant shall prove insolvent, or escape or be unable to pay the fees when convicted, the fees shall be paid out of the county treasury, unless otherwise ordered by the court. This provision obviously relates to purely criminal cases, and not to causes which, though in form criminal, yet are really civil actions. Most actions to recover a penalty or forfeiture are in the name of the state and for a violation of some law. Yet these are not, as a general thing, “ prosecutions ”. within the meaning of section 77. They are civil actions, so denominated and described by chap. 155, R. S. We have already decided that an action to recover the penalty or forfeiture given by section 7, chap. 175, Laws of 1860, was in its nature a civil action. State v. Ives, 15 Wis., 445. But it is not a criminal prosecution where the county becomes liable to pay the fees when the suit fails. This being so, the charge of the circuit court, that the county
Tbe judgment of tbe circuit court is reversed, and a new trial ordered.