16 S.E. 320 | N.C. | 1892
At Fall Term, 1889, of said court, a true bill was found against the defendant, Rufus Sanders, for a forcible trespass, and at Fall Term, 1890, the said defendant was tried and acquitted, and rule was obtained and notice issued to said Robert and Rebecca Epley to show cause at the next term why they should not be marked as prosecutors and taxed with the costs of said action. The said notice having been (701) returned and purporting to have been served on 5 January, 1891, it was adjudged at Fall Term, 1891, that said prosecution was groundless and not required by the public interest, and that the said Robert and Rebecca Epley be taxed with the costs of said action.
And thereupon, during the same term, upon motion of counsel for the said respondents, Robert and Rebecca Epley, on account of defective service of notice, the said judgment taxing them with said costs was stricken out, and said respondents allowed to answer. And said cause having been continued till Fall Term, 1892, and his Honor, Armfield, J., being of opinion that only the judge who tried the cause could tax respondents with the costs, ordered that the rule be discharged, to which order the State and board of commissioners excepted and appealed.
When the prosecutor is marked as such before indictment found, or even during the trial term (if present when the order is made,S. v. Spencer,
The expression in section 738, that the prosecutor may be imprisoned for nonpayment of costs "when the judge court or justice of the peace before whom the case was tried shall adjudge that the prosecution was frivolous or malicious," means simply that the trial judge or justice, or the court in which the trial was had, shall pass upon these facts. The use of the word "court" after the word "judge" shows that there was no intention to restrict the duty of protecting the public from payment of improper costs to the individual judge who tried the cause. The power is left in "the court" by whomsoever presided over. This is also clear from the phraseology of sections 737 and 1204, which are to be construed in pari materia. Section 737 authorizes every judge, court or justice, before or after trial to find the facts, and section 1204 *447 simply places authority in "the court," which, indeed, is the more accurate expression and avoids redundancy.
S. v. Owens,
REVERSED.
Cited: S. v. Kinsauls,