2 S.E. 370 | N.C. | 1887
(S. v. McNeely,
After having been confined in prison twelve months, and in the workhouse for twenty days after the expiration thereof, and after due notice, the defendant filed his petition to the Superior Court, before the clerk, alleging his insolvency and inability to pay the costs, and praying the court to be allowed to file his schedule, take the oath (415) prescribed for insolvents, and be thereafter exempt from arrest because of said costs.
After certain proceedings had in relation to said petition, to wit, on 28 February, 1887, the defendant having taken the prescribed oath, it was ordered and adjudged by the clerk that he be discharged from custody.
From this judgment the State and county commissioners for the county of Wake appealed to the Superior Court in term, and the said appeal being heard at the February Term, 1887, of the Superior Court, before Shepherd, Judge, the judgment of the clerk discharging the defendant was affirmed, and from that judgment the State and county commissioners aforesaid appealed to this Court. Chapter 27, section 2967 of The Code, prescribes, that "every person committed for the fine and costs of any criminal prosecution" may be discharged from imprisonment upon complying with the provisions of said chapter. The defendant filed his petition, and in all other respects complied with the provisions of chapter 27; taking the oath prescribed in section 2972 of The Code, which, it will be observed, requires the insolvent to swear that he is not worth the sum of "fifty dollars, in any worldly substance," etc., instead of "one dollar in any worldly substance, above such exemption as isallotted to me by law," etc., as was required prior to the act of 1881, chapter 76. It was suggested, the change might contravene the constitutional provision in regard to homestead and personal property exemptions, but a moment's reflection will remove all doubt. Upon (416) conviction the judgment of the court is, that the defendant be in the custody of the sheriff until the sentence of the court is complied with, usually until the fine and costs are paid. The prisoner can discharge himself from custody only by paying the fine and costs, or, which he is allowed to do, by complying with the provisions of chapter 27 of The Code, and taking the oath prescribed. He has his election to pay the find and costs, or remain in custody, or if he has not the means wherewith to pay the fine and costs, he may give the notice, and take the prescribed oath. None of his rights of property are violated.
But section 707, subsection 17, of The Code, authorizes "the erection in each county of a house of correction, where vagrants and persons guilty of misdemeanors, shall be restrained, and usefully employed, etc., and section 786 of The Code provides for the establishment of workhouses "for the safe-keeping, correcting, governing, and employing of offenders legally committed thereto," and the board of county commissioners for Wake say that this has been done in Wake, and the defendant was legally committed to the workhouse, and that he is not entitled to his discharge, until the fine and costs are paid. This we think is governed by section 3448, of The Code, which relates to the same subject, and which provides that the detention of the prisoner shall not extent "beyond the time fixed by the judgment of the court." That "the amount realized from hiring out such persons shall be credited to them for the fine and bill of costs in all cases of conviction"; and that, "it shall not be lawful to farm out any such convicted person who may be imprisoned for the nonpayment of a fine, or as punishment imposed for the offense of which he may have been convicted, unless the court before whom the trial is had shall in its judgment so authorize."
These sections of The Code are in pari materia, and the conclusion to be drawn from them is, that the imprisonment, whether "in arcta et *325 stricta custodia," or in the workhouse, or the prisoner be farmed or hired out, cannot be extended "beyond the time fixed by the (417) court."
This view is sustained by S. v. McNeely,
No error. Affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Burton,