Comms. Natrona v. Comms. Fremont

275 P. 102, 40 Wyo. 144, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 21
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1929
DocketNo. 1531
StatusPublished

This text of 275 P. 102 (Comms. Natrona v. Comms. Fremont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comms. Natrona v. Comms. Fremont, 275 P. 102, 40 Wyo. 144, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 21 (Wyo. 1929).

Opinion

On November 18, 1926, a criminal action was commenced in the District Court of Fremont County, Wyoming, against Eric H. Ediin. On December 2, 1926, the venue of the action was duly changed to Natrona County, Wyoming. On March 1, 1927, the District Court of Natrona County made and entered an order appointing G.J. Christie, an attorney at law, to assist the prosecuting attorney of Natrona County in prosecuting the action. This appointment was made pursuant to Section 1457, Wyo. C.S. 1920, reading as follows, to-wit: *Page 148

"The District Court may, whenever it is of the opinion that the public interest requires it, appoint an attorney to assist or act for the prosecuting attorney, in the trial of cases or before the grand jury and, while so assisting or acting, such attorney may perform any act or duty which the prosecuting attorney could perform; and the county shall pay such assistant such compensation for his services as the court shall deem proper, which sum, unless otherwise ordered by the court, shall be deducted from the salary of the prosecuting attorney."

Thereafter the cause was tried, occupying from March 14 to March 19, 1927, both dates inclusive. On March 22, 1927, the court made and entered an order in the cause above mentioned allowing G.J. Christie the sum of $2,847 as his compensation in the case, and providing that the amount should not be deducted from the salary of the prosecuting attorney. The order is in part as follows:

"IT IS, BY THE COURT, ORDERED, That the said G.J. Christie be, and he is hereby allowed the sum of Two Thousand, Eight Hundred and Forty-seven ($2,847.00) Dollars, as and for full compensation for his services in the above entitled case, and,

"IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, That the said above named sum shall be paid to the said G.J. Christie, Esquire, by the County of Natrona and shall be recovered by the County of Natrona from the County of Fremont as a part of the necessary and actual expenses of the trial of said case."

Thereupon Christie presented a verified claim to the board of county commissioners of Natrona County, and that board audited and allowed the claim and thereafter presented an itemized and verified claim against Fremont County. The board of the latter county rejected the claim and the suit herein is brought by Natrona County against Fremont County to recover the amount so paid. The defendant claims that the order appointing Christie was null and void and not binding upon Fremont County, and further, that the amount allowed is excessive. Considerable *Page 149 evidence was introduced as to the reasonableness of the claim, and it was all to the effect that the amount allowed should not have been in excess of $1,000, aside from expenses incurred. The court entered judgment in favor of Natrona County for the full amount claimed, evidently upon the theory that the order of the court fixing the amount was final and conclusive.

1. Section 7497, Wyo. C.S. 1920, relates to the change of venue in criminal cases, and provides that "costs accruing from a change of venue shall be paid by the county in which the indictment was found or information was filed." It is contended herein by the appellant that fees for an attorney appointed by the court pursuant to the provisions of Section 1457, supra, are not included in the term "costs." The term is, it is true, an indefinite one and in some cases has been held not to include attorneys' fees, while in other cases the contrary has been held. See "Words and Phrases" under "Costs." It should not, we think, be construed too narrowly. In the case of Commissioners of Shawnee County v. Commissioners of Wabaunsee County, 4 Kans. 314, the court said:

"It would seem right and proper that each county should bear its own burthens and when in the administration of justice such necessary charges are incurred it does not change the burthen."

In the case of County Commissioners of Howard County v. County Commissioners of Frederick County, 30 Md. 432, the court, speaking of the justness of each county bearing its own expenses in the administration of justice, said, among other things, as follows:

"It would be manifestly unjust to burthen the people of a county to which the case is removed with taxation to defray such expenses; and whilst the privilege of removal for the purpose of a fair and impartial trial has been secured by the constitution and laws, the legislature has been careful to provide against this injustice, by enacting *Page 150 that the costs and expenses incident to such trials, which are properly chargeable to the county, shall be borne and paid by the county from which the causes are removed."

The specific point involved in the case at bar has been decided by the Supreme Court of Indiana. Section 1778 of the Indiana Statutes, in force in 1886, provided that in cases of change of venue the county from which the change was taken should be liable for the expenses of removing, delivering and keeping the prisoner and the expenses of the jury. Section 1779 of the same statutes provided:

"All costs and charges specified in the last preceding section, or coming justly and equitably within its provisions, shall be audited and allowed by the court trying such cause."

The court, in State v. Miller, 107 Ind. 39, 7 N.E. 758, held that attorney fees for a special prosecutor came "justly and equitably" within the provisions of the statute, and said, among other things:

"It is now a well settled legal proposition that a circuit or a criminal court, as the case may be, may assign counsel to defend poor persons charged with crime, and may make allowances for services performed under such an assignment of counsel. * * * It is, also, settled that a circuit or criminal court may, in its discretion, appoint an attorney to assist in the prosecution of a criminal offense, and make him an allowance therefor out of the county treasury. Tull v. State ex rel., 99 Ind. 238. It follows, as a necessary consequence, that the same powers are devolved upon a court to which a criminal cause is taken by a change of venue. This was decided by the case of Gordon v. Board, supra,52 Ind. 322, and was reaffirmed by the recent well considered case of Board v. Courtney, 105 Ind. 311, 4 N.E. 896. The reasonable inference, therefore, is, that allowances regularly made to attorneys, either for prosecuting or defending in a criminal cause by a circuit or criminal court, on a change of venue, come `justly and equitably within' the provisions of Section 1778, above set out." *Page 151

We think that the reasoning of these cases is sound, and that Section 7497, Wyo. C.S. 1920, contemplates that the costs in a criminal case on a change of venue includes all expenses that would properly have been payable by the county in which the case originated had the venue not been changed, and that this includes a reasonable allowance made for an assistant to the prosecuting attorney in the proper case. It may be that there are cases in which such fee should not be paid by any county, but should be taken out of the salary of the prosecuting attorney as contemplated by Section 1457, supra. And see the case of State ex rel v. Lewis and Clarke County, 34 Mont. 351, 86 P. 419. But it can hardly be claimed that the instant case is one of them. The case appears to have been an important one. Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 P. 102, 40 Wyo. 144, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comms-natrona-v-comms-fremont-wyo-1929.