11 So. 2d 585 | Fla. | 1943
This is a case of original jurisdiction in mandamus. It is made to appear that the petitioner, R.O. Cheney, on June 17, 1942, was convicted in the Circuit Court of Suwannee County, Florida, of the crime of larceny of cattle and for said offense sentenced by the trial court to serve a stated period at hard labor in the Florida State Prison. On September 15, 1942, within the ninety day period provided for by Section
On September 29, 1942, petitioner, by appropriate motion and affidavit, represented to the Honorable R.H. Rowe, a judge of the Circuit Court of Suwannee County, Florida, that he (Cheney) was utterly unable to pay in whole or in part the costs legally incurred incidental to the criminal cause in which he was convicted and in which a sentence and judgment to the State Prison now appears of record against him. He made oath and offered to establish by creditable and satisfactory *318
testimony to the lower court, in conformity with Section
The alternative writ commands the Honorable R.H. Rowe, circuit judge, to exercise the jurisdiction conferred upon him by law, and when exercising the jurisdiction so conferred he well hear all the evidence offered by the petitioner and the State of Florida under the provisions of Section
The respondent filed a demurrer to the alternative writ and grounds thereof are viz: (1) the facts set forth in the alternative writ are legally insufficient to support a peremptory writ; (2) the respondent had no legal authority on September 29, 1942, to adjudicate the petitioner's insolvency; (3) that the respondent lost jurisdiction to hear and enter the order of insolvency as that power was transferred to the Supreme Court of Florida when the appeal was taken; (4) that the power to enter the insolvency order was limited to the time prescribed by statute when the court was in session in Suwannee County, Florida.
Section
Section
The legal sufficiency of the application made under the provisions of Section
Courts of other jurisdictions when interpreting or construing Acts, similar to the one here presented, outlining the procedure to be observed in obtaining an order of insolvency of an indigent and directing the payment of costs by a political unit, so as to obtain a review by an appellate court of such criminal judgments, hold generally that such proceedings prescribed by statute necessary to obtain such adjudication and directing the payment of costs by the State or County, broadly speaking, does not involve the jurisdiction of appeal, but merely is incidental and limited to the power to enter an order and direct the payment of costs so that the appeal may be perfected and the judgment reviewed, and errors corrected, if any, by an apellate court. Ordinarily, a broad and liberal interpretation of such statutes is given by the courts. See 4 C.J.S. Sec. 523-25, pp. 983-86; 3 C.J. Sec. 1167-71, pp. 1124-26; 17 C.J. Sec. 3375, pp. 103-4; State v. Hudson, 55 R.I. 141,
The Supreme Court, under Section
If a broad and liberal construction is given by this Court to Section
The demurrer of the respondent is hereby overruled and five days allowed respondent in which to file an answer or return to the alternative writ of mandamus and if not filed within the five days, then a peremptory writ of mandamus as prayed will issue herein.
It is so ordered.
BUFORD, C. J., TERRELL and ADAMS, JJ., concur.