67 So. 2d 282 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1953
Defendant was convicted of reckless driving, in violation of Section 3, Title 36, Code 1940.
The question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict is not presented. The affirmative charge was not requested, neither was there a motion for a new trial, nor a motion to exclude the evidence. Whited v. State,
We have not been favored with a brief for the defendant, but have carefully examined the record, as the law requires, and find no reversible error.
The jury assessed a fine of $25 and as additional punishment for said offense the court imposed a sentence of 60 days in the county jail. The fine and costs not having been paid, nor judgment confessed therefor, the court sentenced defendant to a term of 20 days in the county jail to pay the fine, and sentenced him to an additional term of 69 days in the county jail to pay the costs, at the rate of 75 cents per day, amounting to $51.35.
In Ex parte Hill,
These statutes now appear in the 1940 Code as Sections 339, 341 and 342 of Title 15, the only material change being the rate of payment of costs, under Section 342, which is now 75 cents per day. No provision appears in such statutes for the sentencing of defendant to the county jail to pay the costs.
A full and complete discussion of the question of the authority of the court under the statute to sentence to hard labor for the costs appears in the Hill opinion, supra, with excerpts quoted in support thereof from the decisions of the court in Ex parte Long,
In sentencing the defendant the court did not follow the provisions of the Code sections, supra.
The judgment of conviction is affirmed. The cause is remanded for proper sentence.
Affirmed. Remanded for proper sentence. *318