47 P. 196 | Or. | 1896
Opinion by
It is argued, however, that there is a judgment in this case for costs which can be enforced against the defendant’s estate, and for that reason his personal representatives have a right to prosecute this appeal. But costs are only incidental to the real question in issue, and are recovered or not, according to the determination of such question. In criminal proceedings they result solely as a leg'al consequence from the judgment of conviction,, and, unless the judgment itself can be reviewed on appeal after the death of the defendant, it is manifest that a mere incident thereto cannot be so reviewed. The questions involved in this case were directly presented in O’Sullivan v. People, 144 Ill. 604 (32 N. E. 192); and Herrington v. State, 53 Ga. 552. In each of these cases the defendant died after the cause had been submitted to the appellate court for decision, and the right to continue them in the name of a personal representative of the deceased was denied; the courts refusing to proceed any further in the matter, or pronounce any decision in the cases. It follows that this appeal must abate, and it is so ordered.
Appeal Abated.