3 Ga. App. 791 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The plaintiff in error was surety on the appearance bond of Amos Hardaway, who was accused, in the city court of Barnesville, of the offense of larceny from the person. The bond was forfeited, and judgment absolute entered against the plaintiff in error, Wellmaker, surety. The points raised by the bill of exceptions and the record are, whether the bond is a valid, binding obligation or is fatally defective; whether the recognizance was properly forfeited, even if the judge of the court was not disqualified; and whether, as a matter of fact and of law, the judge of the city court of Barnesville is not disqualified, by reason of his financial interest in the result, from entering a judgment absolute on a criminal recognizance in that court.
We shall consider these questions in reverse order. The Civil Code, §4045, so far as is now material, declares that “No judge or justice of any court, no ordinary, justice of the peace, nor presiding officer of any inferior judicature or commission, can sit in any cause or proceeding in which he is pecuniarily interested, without the consent of all the parties in interest,” etc. From the provisions of the act creating the city court of Barnesville (Acts of 1899, p. 332) it is apparent that the judge of that court, in his capacity as clerk, receives his compensation from the fees fixed for his services in that court as clerk thereof. It must be conceded that the judge, acting as clerk, is pecuniarily interested in the costs; and but for a prevailing public policy, which has long existed and been recognized in this State, which we may say is almost coeval with the history of the State itself, we should hold, .in accordance with our personal views, that the interest of the
Construing the words “pecuniarily interested,” as used in the code section, strictly with reference to the context, they plainly refer to the words “cause or proceeding.” That is, if the judge has any interest in the original subject-matter of the cause of action, he will be disqualified upon the same ground as if he were related by blood or marriage to one of the parties within the prohibited degree. That is disqualification in the cause. The cost,, however, is only an attendant of the suit. Tt is, in one sense, an inseparable attendant of both parties until the cause is 'ended, but it hovers over both parties and does not attach itself to either until it is affixed upon the one or the other by the judgment of the court, -and. thus becomes permanently domiciled. ‘ The first act fixing compensation of officers by fees or costs, which we have been able to discover, was the act of 1792, and this act (in connection with the fees provided for quite a number of officers) made provision for the payment of clerks of courts in this manner. It is as clerk that the judge of the city court of Barnesville is empowered to collect costs, and thereby has a pecuniary interest in the accumu
The fact that costs are of statutory and not of common law origin is quite important in the decision of the question before us. “The term ‘costs/ as applied to proceedings in a court of justice, has, in the acceptation of the profession, and by the practice of all courts in Georgia, a well-understood meaning. It includes all charges fixed by statute as compensation for services rendered by officers of-the court in the progress of the cause.” Davis, v. State, 33 Ga. 531-533; Markham v. Ross, 73 Ga. 105. If collectible, the costs are payable to the officer, no matter which party prevails. The history of section 4045 of the Civil Code confirms the view that the pecuniary interest in a cause or proceeding referred to does not include an interest in the costs. The germ of the code section was the fourth section of the act approved •December 5, 1801 (found on page 460 of Cobb’s Digest), which provided that “In all cases brought in the said superior courts, or either of them, where either of the judges thereof shall be a party or interested therein, it shall be the duty of three or more of the justices of the inferior court to preside at the trial of the same.” Next the act of 1868 was passed (Acts 1868, p. 129); it gave the clerk of the superior court the right to select a member of the bar to preside where the judge of the superior court was disqualified and where opposing counsel could not agree upon a member of the liar who was present. [Thus the act stood in the
But while we agree with counsel that the act creating the city court of Barnesville is not in accord with our view of what should be the policy of the State with reference to the payment of judicial officers by fees, still we can not hold that the provision ip the act upon this subject is contrary to the public polic}'- of this State, or unconstitutional. On the contrary, it has been the policy of this State from the earliest times to pay numerous judicial officers by assigning to them the fees usually denominated costs, in lieu of any fixed salary. Besides justices of the peace, all ordinaries are paid by fees, and the same contingency as to the collection of their costs may arise as in the present case. Justices of the inferior courts received fees for their services, in lieu of a salary. Judges of the county courts, except where otherwise recommended by the grand jury, were thus paid, and quite a number of the acts creating city courts, especially those whose territorial jurisdiction was limited to a subdivision of a county, have provisions practically identical with those in the act now under consideration. So that, so far from the provisions of the act creating the city court of Barnesville being contrary to the public policy of the State, it may rather be asserted to be in accord with its settled policy in the establishment of inferior judicatures. This policy is based upon reasons of public economy; and while this policy may not meet our approval, it can not be overlooked or disregarded. As we can not conclude that the General Assembly of 1899 intended not to create the court, which it solemnly declared it was creating, as well as on account of the other reasons to which we have referred, we are constrained to hold that the judge of the city court was not disqualified to preside in the case now before us.
2.1 The plaintiff in error demurred to the forfeiture, upon the ground that there was no record in this case as provided by law.
3. It is insisted by plaintiff in error that the recognizance upon which he was surety is fatally defective, because it does not allege an offense committed against the laws of Georgia, and because the bond does not clearly set forth the court to which the principal is to appear. The bond says,' “the city court of Barnesville.” Plaintiff in error insists that the bond should have required the defendant to appear at “the city court of Barnesville, Pike County, Georgia.” Neither of these points is meritorious. It is true that
For the sole reason stated in the second division of this opinion, we find error in the judgment of the judge of the superior court in dismissing the certiorari; and the judgment is Reversed.