74 N.C. 98 | N.C. | 1876
At the Spring Term, 1875, of the Superior Court of Rutherford County, the defendant, Mooney, was indicted, submitted for an assault and battery upon Elias Carrier, and was by the court sentenced to one month's imprisonment in the county jail, and judgment was given against him for the costs of the prosecution. Before his term of confinement had expired, the defendant obtained an unconditional pardon from the Governor of the State, and was discharged from jail without having paid the costs. At the instance of the Solicitor, a rule was taken on the defendant, returnable to the next term, to show cause why execution should not issue for the costs. In answer to the rule, he set forth his said pardon and pleaded the same as a discharge from the payment of the costs. His Honor held that such was not the effect of the pardon, and ordered that the execution do issue; and the defendant appealed to this court. (99) *86
There is no error. By Art. III, sec. 6, of the Constitution, the Governor is invested with power to grant reprieves, commutations and pardons, after conviction, for all offences except in cases of impeachment. In the Statev. Underwood,
The costs and fees in criminal prosecutions are regulated by statute. Bat. Rev. chap. 105, and the acts of 1873-'74, chap. 175. It is expressly provided in chap. 33, sec. 80, Bat. Rev., that "every person convicted of an offense, or confessing himself guilty, or submitting to the court, shall pay the costs of the prosecution."
The legal effect of a conviction and judgment is to vest the right to the costs in those entitled to receive them. The judgment, though nominally in the name of the State, is, in effect, in favor of those performing services in the case for which fees are given as a compensation. An absolute pardon discharges a fine imposed, because that goes to the public, and the Governor represents the public, but the costs belong to private persons, and the pardon can no more discharge the costs, than it can discharge a debt due by the defendant to a third person. In Holliday v. The People, 5 Gill., 214, the defendant was convicted and sentenced to thirty days imprisonment and one hundred dollars fine. He was afterwards pardoned by the Governor, and it was held that the fine was thereby discharged, but that the prisoner was not released, either from the payment of the costs incurred by him, or the costs of the prosecution. So in Estop v. Lacy,
In Rowe v. State, 2 Bay. 565, one Kelly had been convicted of crime and fined by the court £ 50, of which one-half went to the informer. The sheriff who had the execution for the fine being called on by a rule to show cause why the money had not been collected and paid over, produced the Governor's pardon for the whole, as well for the moiety which went to the informer as for the other moiety which went to the State. It was, however, held by the court that the Governor had no right to remit any fine or forfeiture specifically appropriated, *87 and that the fees due the officers of the court were vested rights by law as much as the moiety of the fine to the informer, and equally beyond the Governor's power of remission.
This is but an affirmance of the principles of the common law, which allows the King the right of pardoning forfeitures, etc., but not so as to affect private rights vested in third persons by law. 2 Durn. and East., 569; 5 Co. 51; 3 Inst. 238. Also
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Crook,
(101)