36 Cal. 552 | Cal. | 1869
A. M. Swaney and Adelia Seale were indicted for murder in Mariposa County, and on their application the place of trial was changed to San Joaquin County. Several witnesses residing in the County of Mariposa attended the trial under subpoena. At the conclusion of the trial, on application of said witnesses, the Court made three several orders, allowing the witnesses so attending certain specified sums, amounting in the aggregate to something over one thousand two hundred dollars, and directing the County Treasurer of San Joaquin County to pay the same. The said orders have been brought up for review in pursuance of a writ for that purpose issued by this Court. It is claimed that the District Court exceeded its jurisdiction in making said orders.
Section five hundred fifty-six of the Criminal Practice Act of 1851 provides, that: “When a person shall attend before a Magistrate, Grand Jury, or Court, as a witness on behalf of the People, upon a subpoena, or by virtue of a recognizance, and it shall appear that he has come from a place out of the county, or that he is poor, the Court, if the attendance of the witness be upon a trial, by an order upon its minutes, or in any other case, the County Judge, by au order subscribed by him, may direct the Treasurer of the county to pay the witness a reasonable sum, to be specified in the order, for his expenses.” And section five hundred fifty-seven provides, that “Upon the production of the order, or a certified
Section five hundred fifty-six certainly authorizes the Court to make orders of the character of those in question. The language is very specific, and admits of no other construction. In this case all the conditions upon which the Court is authorized to act are found. "We can perceive no constitutional objection to the provision. The taxation of costs, which includes the determination of the amount of the allowance made to witnesses, who, willing or unwilling, are required by the process of the Court to attend trials at a distance from their residences, in which they have no special or peculiar personal interest, is incident to every judicial proceeding, and the jurisdiction to hear and determine the principal case necessarily involves jurisdiction over all mere incidental matters. It is certainty competent for the Legislature to make the costs in proceedings for the general administration of the criminal law, in which the People arc parties plaintiff, chargeable upon the people, either of the State at large, or of the county in which the proceeding originates, or is had. The county is hut a subdivision of the State, adopted for the more convenient administration of the Government. The People, as plaintiffs, are parties to the action in which the allowance is made, and are heard through the District Attorney. The allowance is a judicial act, and when made in a case authorized by law, is conclusive upon the county.
It is insisted by respondent, that the section under consideration is repealed by implication by subsequent Acts— the Act of 1855, creating Boards of Supervisors of the several counties, and empowering them to examine, settle, and allow all accounts chargeable against a county; the Act of 1857, providing that unaudited claims against a county must be presented to the Board of Supervisors, etc.; the Act of 1864, providing that no unaudited claim or demand shall thereafter he paid out of the county treasury, unless such claim be presented, etc.; and the Act of 1866, pro
This branch of the question, however, is not before us; nor can we consider the suggestion that the Court is about to proceed to enforce the orders by process for contempt against the Treasurer, for we can only review on this record
But the Act of April 29th, 1851, (Stats. 1851, p. 185,) passed only two days before the Criminal Practice Act, provides that: “In every case where a criminal action may have been or shall be removed before tidal, the costs accruing upon such removal and trial shall be a charge against the county in which the indictment was or may be found”
“Sec. 2. The Clerk of the county to which such action is or may be removed shall certify the amount of said costs to the Auditor of his county, who shall audit the same and issue his draft therefor upon the Treasurer of the county from which such action was or may be removed.”
The two Acts must have been before the Legislature at the same time. They are in pari materia, and must be read together, and thus read, it is manifest that where there has been a change of the place of trial, as in this case, the county in which the indictment is found, and not the county in which the trial is had, is the one to be charged with the payment of the costs. The second section in the last Act cited provides the mode of authenticating the amount and the means through which the treasury of the county chargeable is to be reached. It is not provided that the county where the trial is had shall in the first instance pay the allowance and then look to the other for reimbursement. Perhaps, now, it might be necessary to present the warrant so drawn, either with or without a certified copy of the Judge making the allowance to foreign witnesses to the Board of Supervisors of the county charged, in the mode provided for other demands. But the question has not been argued, and it is unnecessary to decide it now.
The indictment in this case was found in Mariposa
The District Court is directed to so modify the several orders that they shall he made payable by the Treasurer of the County of Mariposa,
Mr. Justice Sprague expressed no opinion.