23 Iowa 168 | Iowa | 1867
The correctness of this ruling is to be tested by the true meaning and intent of sections 4881 and 5005 of the Revision. They are as follows:
“Sec. 4881. A judgment that the defendant pay a fine, may alsó direct that he be imprisoned until the fine be satisfied, specifying the extent of the imprisonment,*170 which shall not exceed 'one day for every three and one-third dollars of the fine.”
“ Sec. 5005. When any person convicted of a criminal offense, is sentenced to pay a fine and costs only, and stand committed until sentence "'be performed, if the sentence be not complied with by payment of the "sum due within thirty days next following, the sheriff may liberate him from prison, if committed for no other cause, and if he be unable to pay such fine and costs, upon his giving his promissory note for the amount due, payable to the treasurer of the county where he was committed, on demand with interest, accompanied with a written schedule containing a true account of all his property, of every kind, by him signedo and sworn to, which note and schedule must be by such sheriff delivered, without delay to the treasurer for the use of the county.”
These sections were intended for the benefit and liberation of pauper criminals, and are to be liberally construed, and we cannot but think that when the defendant has substantially complied with the provisions of the sections, the penalty of the law, so far as he is concerned, is satisfied, and he is entitled to have the judgments canceled. If, after he has done so, an execution could issue on said judgments, then, it seems to us, the language of these sections (if they are to be construed according to their natural import) would be without • any sensible meaning or object.
If, on the other hand, an execution could not regularly fssue under the circumstance, which we believe, then the party is entitled to have the judgments against him satisfied. It follows, therefore, that the motion referred to should have been sustained, and not overruled.
Reversed.