City of Miltonvale v. Lanoue

35 Kan. 603
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 Kan. 603 (City of Miltonvale v. Lanoue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Miltonvale v. Lanoue, 35 Kan. 603 (kan 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

Two cases, arising substantially out of the same facts, have been presented to this court. It appears that on February 12, 1885, a prosecution was commenced before the police judge of the city of Miltonvale, a city of the third class in Cloud county, in the name of the city, and . against S. C. Lanoue, for an alleged violation of a city ordinance prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors. The com[604]*604plaint contained two counts. The defendant was tried and convicted on both counts, aqd afterward appealed to the district court, where he was again tried and convicted on both counts; and it was adjudged that—

“He pay a fine of $100 on the first count in said complaint, and a fine of $100 on the second count in said complaint, and the costs of this prosecution, taxed at $281.20, and that he stand committed to the jail of Cloud county, Kansas, until the amount of said fine and costs shall be paid; and hereof let execution issue.”

The defendant then appealed to the supreme court, and completed his appeal on July 21, 1886, by filing in the supreme court a transcript of the proceedings of the courts below. On July 27, 1886, the defendant applied to the supreme court for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that he was unlawfully restrained of his liberty by Edward Marshall, sheriff of Cloud county, Kansas,'in pursuance of the foregoing judgment and order. The writ of habeas corpus prayed for was allowed and issued, and the sheriff made a return thereof, admitting that he restrained the defendant of his liberty in pursuance of said judgment and order up to July 27, 1886, when he released him from his custody, in pursuance of an order from the supreme court.

The defendant now claims, (1) that the court below erred in ordering that he be committed to the county jail, and indeed he claims that the court below had no jurisdiction to make any such order; and he further claims, (2) that even if the court below had jurisdiction to’ make any such order, and even if the order when made was valid and proper, still that when the defendant appealed to the supreme court, the appeal had the effect to suspend such order, and indeed to suspend the entire judgment of the district court pending the appeal, and that the defendant was then entitled to be discharged from custody until the appeal should be determined, and finally unless the judgment of the district court should be affirmed.

[605]*605i Entire jud" p'nnhti'by appeal. [604]*604We shall consider the last question first. We think the defendant is entitled to be discharged from custody pending his [605]*605appeal in the supreme court. We have previously had occasion to examine this question, and have decided it in other cases, although no written opinion has ever before been delivered. Where the payment of a fine and the costs of suit are imposed upon the defendant, it is always the duty of the trial court to order “ that the defendant stand committed to the'city prison, or the jail of the county in which the judgment is rendered, until the judgment is complied with.” (Laws of 1879, ch. 84, §1; Comp. Laws of 1879, ¶ 943. See also Crim. .Code, §251; also Comp. Laws of 1879, ch. 83, ¶ 4876.) And always where an appeal is taken in such a case, the judgment itself with regard to the fine and costs is suspended pending the appeal. (The State v. Volmer, 6 Kas. 379, 384.) Indeed it is a general rule that an appeal suspends the judgment or order appealed from, and everything connected therewith, unless the statute in express terms or by the clearest of implications provides otherwise; and there is no statute providing otherwise in the present case. In an ordinary criminal prosecution, where imprisonment is imposed upon a defendant as a part of the punishment, then the statute provides that there shall be no stay of the execution of the judgment pending the ap'peal. (Crim. Code, § 287 ) But there is no statute providing that there shall be no stay where the judgment imposes only a fine and costs. Hence a judgment imposing only a fine and costs must be stayed pending an appeal. And if the judgment for the fine and costs is to be stayed, it would seem to follow that all incidents thereof, all judgments or ordershaving for their object merely the enforcement of the judgment for the fine and costs, should also be stayed or be suspended pending the appeal. And clearly, we think, such is the case.

The imprisonment fixed by the trial court in cases of this kind is not for the purpose of punishment, but like the issuing of an ordinary execution, is resorted to merely as a means of enforcing the judgment for the fine and costs. (Comp. Laws of 1879, ch. 19a, ¶¶ 928, 943, 944; In re Boyd, 34 Kas. 573.) Now if the imprisonment in cases of this kind [606]*606is resorted to only for the purpose of enforcing the judgment for the fine and costs, and if the judgment for the fine and costs is suspended pending the appeal, it would be improper during such suspension to imprison the defendant, or to issue an execution against him. It would be improper to imprison him for the purpose of requiring him to do something which for the time being he is not required to do. It would be improper to imprison him for the purpose of requiring him to pay a fine or costs when for the time being he could not legally or properly be required to pay the same. But if he should pay the fine and costs for the purpose of avoiding the imprisonment, then what would become of his appeal? Prom the time of such payment his appeal would be valueless. Pending the appeal in the supreme court, we think the entire judgment is suspended—that with regard to the imprisonment, as well as that with regard to the payment of a fine or costs. The doubt expressed in the case of In re Chambers, 30 Kas. 455, was there inserted in deference to the opinion of an able and learned district judge of this state; but after a careful examination of the entire question, we are of the opinion that there is not much room for such doubt.

[607]*6072' mentforier not erroneous. [606]*606The only other question presented in this case is, whether the court below erred in ordering that the defendant be committed to the county jail of Cloud county until the fine and costs adjudged against him should be paid. We do not understand that it is claimed by the defendant that the ordinance under which the defendant was convicted and sentenced is invalid or void; indeed, we think he admits that it is valid; and that it is valid we would refer to the case of Franklin v. Westfall, 27 Kas. 614. But the defendant claims that there was no authority for the court below to commit the defendant to the county jail; that if there was any authority to commit him at all, it was to the jail of the city of Miltonvale, and not to the jail of Cloud county. Now this is a question of but slight importance; for if the court below had the power to commit the defendant to the jail of the city, and not to the jail of the county, then we could order that the judgment of [607]

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Bluebook (online)
35 Kan. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-miltonvale-v-lanoue-kan-1886.