OPINION
Ann Helton was convicted in the district court of Natrona County, Wyoming, for second degree murder. Appeal was taken in the case and the record on appeal was filed in this court on August 21, 1953. She now makes original application to this court for admission to bail, not showing that an application had been made to the judge of the trial court. We requested briefs from counsel for the respective parties but none have been filed, so we have made an independent investigation as to the law applicable in this case.
Section 14, Article 1, of our constitution provides that: “All persons shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, except for capital offenses when the proof is evident or the presumption great.” We held in the case of In re Boulter,
Previous to 1909 bail was not permissible after conviction of a felony. In re Boulter, supra. But in 1909, the legislature adopted the following provision, now contained in § 10-1411, W.C.S. 1945, reading as follows : “ * * * provided, that whenever a person is convicted of a bailable felony, except murder in second degree, and the judgment shall be suspended as aforesaid, it shall be the duty of the court to fix reasonable bail to be given by the defendant, with sureties to be approved by the court or the clerk thereof, and conditioned for the appearance of the person so convicted
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on the first day of the next term of said court, and from term to term thereof until the final disposition of said case by the supreme court of the state, and to abide the final judgment and order of the court therein, * * This provision has stood on our statutes along with section 3-5414 for thirty-five years, and should be harmonized therewith. It is clear that while under this provision, it is mandatory upon the trial judge to grant bail in the ordinary felony case, he is not required as a matter of law to grant such bail in the case of conviction of second degree murder. The duty of the justices of this court is equal to, but no greater than, that of the trial court. Hence the italicized word “shall” appearing in § 3-5414, W.C.S. 1945, is to be construed to mean “may”. On the other hand, while § 10-1411, W.C.S. 1945, does not compel the trial court to grant bail when the conviction is for second degree murder, it does not, specifically at least, forbid the granting of bail in such case. At common law, the granting of bail in such cases was left to the judicial discretion. In re Wood,
We have accordingly before us a situation in which the judge of the trial court and the justices of the supreme court have concurrent jurisdiction in permitting bail in, the case before us at their discretion. The question then is as to whether or not that discretion should be exercised by the justices of this court before an application has been made to the judge of the dis
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trict court. We find it stated in 8 C.J.S. 83, § 39, as follows: “Ordinarily, however as a matter of practice the application should, for reasons of comity and because of the trial judge’s superior opportunity to possess the facts, be made to the lower court in the first instance and the appellate court will as a rule refuse to hear the initial application, except in an extraordinary case, * * * In the case of Ex parte Schriber,
Our attention has been called to the fact that some fifteen years ago in the case of Espy v. State,
