12 S.E. 44 | N.C. | 1890
The defendant was tried before a justice of the peace for willful trespass on land after being forbidden and without license to enter, and was adjudged guilty. On appeal to the Superior Court, the defendant was acquitted. The case on appeal, as made out by the appellant, and to which no exception or countercase was served, states that the (957) judge found the prosecution to be neither frivolous nor malicious, but adjudged, without any further finding of fact, that, as a matter of law, the prosecutor must, in any event, pay the costs. The record of the judgment, however, shows that the court adjudged that there was not reasonable ground for the prosecution and that it was not required by the public interest, and taxed the prosecutor with the costs. From this judgment the prosecutor, S. P. Gooch, appealed.
Only the appellant's statement of case on appeal is sent up in the transcript, but as it appears that service thereof was accepted by the solicitor within the time allowed, and no exceptions thereto nor countercase was served, it stands as the case on appeal. Russell v. Davis,
There is, however, a contradiction between the record proper and the case on appeal, and the record must govern. Farmer v. Willard,
The appellant probably relied on this case having come up by appeal from a justice of the peace. In such cases, as is held in Merrimon v.Comrs.,
As to causes of which a magistrate has final jurisdiction, when no appeal is taken from that court, it would seem, by virtue of the Code, sec. 3756, the prosecutor could only have been taxed with costs when the prosecution is adjudged frivolous or malicious, while section 737 extended to justices' as well as other courts, the power to tax prosecutor *659
with costs also in cases where there was no reasonable ground for the prosecution, or it was not required by public interest. Whatever difficulty there might have been in reconciling these apparently conflicting provisions of the Code is practically removed by chapter 34, Laws 1889, which purports to amend section 737, but which, also, being later in time, must modify section 3756 where it conflicts with it. This statute of 1889 applies to justices', as well as other courts, and provides that the prosecutor shall be taxed with the costs if the defendant is discharged from arrest for want of probable cause. The opinion in Merrimon v. Comrs.,
Per Curiam. No error.
Cited: S. v. Price,
(959)