54 F. Supp. 843 | D. Minnesota | 1944
For the. purpose of deciding whether the court has power to relieve the defendant from the payment of costs to plaintiff, the parties in this case have stipulated the following facts:
“(1) That defendant has violated the provisions of the Federal Safety Appliance Acts in all respects as alleged in the complaint ;
“(2) That defendant is ready and willing to pay to plaintiff the penalty provided by law, that is, $100.00 for each violation, a total of $800.00.”
The question resolves itself into an interpretation of the statute pertaining to costs in prosecutions of the character here involved, which reads:
“When judgment is rendered against the defendant in a prosecution for any fine or forfeiture incurred under a statute of the United States, he shall be subject to the payment of costs; and on every conviction for any other offense not capital, the court may, in its discretion, award that the defendant shall pay the costs of the prosecution.”- 28 U.S.C.A. § 822.
The offenses involved come within the purview of the first clause of this statute, and it is defendant’s contention that the assessment of costs against it is discretionary with the court because the words “subject to” appearing therein may be treated as granting the court permissive authority in the matter of' such assessment.
I do not agree with this theory. It seems clear to me that Congress by separately treating the two classes of cases intended a distinction to be. made between
“Section 1615, U.S.Compiled Statutes [28 U.S.C.A. § 822] (U.S.R.S. § 974 [this section]), provides, as to costs in criminal prosecutions, for two classes of cases: (1) Judgments, in prosecutions, for fine or forfeiture. (2) Judgments in all other cases not capital. It is provided in said section that in the first class of cases the defendant ‘shall be subject to payment of costs,’ and in the second class of cases that ‘the court may, in its 'discretion, award that the defendant shall pay the costs of the prosecution.’ The words ‘shall be subject to the payment of costs,’ used in connection with the first class of cases, are in apposition to the words used in connection with the second class of cases, to wit, ‘the court may, in its discretion, award that the defendant shall pay the costs of the prosecution,’ and can, I apprehend mean nothing else but that in the first class of cases costs follow the judgment as of course, and in the second class of cases their award is discretionary with the court. The matter in hand is in the first class of cases, and I am constrained to hold that the costs of prosecution follow the judgment as a matter of course, without the necessity of any special award.”
Counsel for defendant points to a long list of cases in this court similar in character in which no costs were assessed, though no instance' is mentioned wherein the matter was ever called to the court’s attention or a ruling sought on the question here presented. I do not believe that under the circumstances the Government is foreclosed from seeking costs oi; that the court has power to. relieve the defendant from the payment thereof.