5 Colo. App. 138 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the court.
The proceedings in this case do not conform to the stat
There are several reasons why the judgment cannot be sustained. According to the adjudication of the supreme court in the case of Lawn v. The People, 11 Colo. 343, the court was powerless to render a judgment affecting the rights of the absent defendant. This is the settled law of this jurisdiction. Since this is true, to dismiss the appeal and is§ue a procedendo was clearly a violation of the law.
The proceeding was totally at variance with the course indicated by the statute regulating appeals to the county court from judgments of conviction in criminal matters rendered by justices of the peace. The act provides that' in cases of that description the defendant shall have the right to take the case to the county court upon giving a bond conditioned simply to pay whatever judgment that court may render against him. The statute also enacts that when the cause reaches the county court it shall be there tried. The entry of a judgment in the county court against the appellant is the only possible breach of the statutory bond. Under these circumstances, the trial is one de novo, and is to be conducted according to the due course of such proceedings in that tribunal. The jurisdiction of the county court is in no sense appellate, when the term is used to express the idea that the proceedings of the lower court are subject to
Probably the county court dismissed the appeal on the hypothesis that, as the statute pointed out no method by which a recalcitrant defendant could be brought into court to answer the charge, the court was powerless to do otherwise than remand the case. This cannot be, since the court had full, power to. issue the requisite process to bring the defendant in and force him to a trial. If the defendant is brought in, tried and convicted, the judgment against him can be enforced, and the condition of his bond will be broken when he fails to pay the judgment rendered against him. .
What has been said is sufficient to indicate to the court below what should be done in the present case. For the error committed in entering the judgment stated, it must be reversed and remanded.
Reversed.