State v. . Griffis

23 S.E. 164, 117 N.C. 709
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 23 S.E. 164 (State v. . Griffis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Griffis, 23 S.E. 164, 117 N.C. 709 (N.C. 1895).

Opinion

Avery, J.:

¥e have had occasion in State v. Crook, 115 N. C., 763, to comment upon the fact that the practice adopted in the courts of this State of suspending judgment upon the payment of cost, is a peculiar one for which we have searched in vain for precedents elsewhere. Indeed, it has proved difficult to find adjudications in other courts furnishing any analogies which would aid us in reaching a conclusion as to the force and effect of such orders. It appears, however, that a practice somewhat similar had prevailed for many years in the courts of Massachusetts before it received the legislative sanction by enactment into a statute. Commonwealth v. Dondican, 115 Mass., 136. But that Court and those of Florida and Mississippi, (Gibson v. State, 68 Miss., 241; ex parte Williams, 25 Fla., 310) where the Massachusetts idea seems to have been transplanted, though they may differ as to the manner or details of the proceeding, concur in holding that the sentence of the court, whether upon a finding or a confession of guilt, *711 can be suspended only with the consent of the defendant. But as the postponement of punishment, with the possibility that it may never be inflicted, is deemed a favor to him, it is presumed by, the Court that he assents to such an order when made in his presence and without objection on his part. State v. Crook, supra, at p. 766; Gibson v. State, supra. Where, under the practice prevailing in Massa-chussetts, the order was made that the judgment lie on file, it was entered with the consent of both the defendant and the Commonwealth’s attorney, and left either at liberty to have the case reinstated on the docket and to demand that the court proceed to judgment. We have heretofore had occasion, in State v. Crook, supra, to call attention to the fact that the authorties which we have cited sustained the right of the court to pronounce judgment for the costs in the same order that provides for the suspension of sentence of fine or imprisonment indefinitely or to a time certain. Every defendant who is convicted before a justice of the peace of any criminal offence has a right to appeal and have the issue tried de novo in a higher court. Had the justice adjudged that the defendant be fined or imprisoned and thereupon refused to allow him to prosecute an appeal demanded in apt time and in the manner prescribed by law, it cannot be questioned that he would have had the right to invoke the power of such higher court to compel the transmission of the record to the end that the trial de novo might have been had above. State v. Sykes, 104 N. C., 700. The law does not tolerate the invasion of an acknowledged right by indirection when it can not be done directly. It is in order to preclude the possibility of such an infringment of individual right, that the authority of the court, on conviction, to postpone the infliction of punishment has been conceded only where the defendant either expressly assents or, being present, fails to *712 object, and is therefore presumed to give his consent to the order. This theory has been approved by us in State v. Crook, but, were that not true, it would be a manifest invasion of the right of appeal guaranteed by the statute {Code, Sec. 900) to every defendant on conviction in a criminal prosecution, to impose upon him against his will a tax which is ordinarily an incident to a rightful conviction. Put where he gives notice of appeal at the time of trial, as we must assume the defendant did, that is unmistakably a dissent to the postponement of judgment, and the court before which he was convicted must not be allowed to adopt a practice which would put it in the power of justices’ courts to load innocent defendants with heavy burdens by refusing indefinitely to pronounce any judgment except that as to costs.

As long as the judgment of the justice, from which the defendant appealed, stands, it gives rise to the inference that it was entered with his consent, and where a judgment is entered upon a confession of guilt or upon a plea of nolo contendere or in any way upon a submission of a defendant to the authority of the court, lie is not allowed by appeal to controvert his voluntary acknowledgment. Rush v. Halcyon, 67 N. C., 47; Philpot v. State, 65 N. H., 250; City of Edens v. Beck, 47 Mo., 234; 12 Am. & Eng. Enc., 487. A defendant may put himself in this predicament of his own free will, but no justice of the peace can compel him to forego the right of appeal which the law gives him.

It does not seem to us necessary to the determination of this appeal that we should pass upon the question whether the usual order of a trial court, made at the request or with the assent of a defendant, that judgment be suspended upon the payment of costs, is reviewable by appeal to the Supreme Court from a "Superior or Criminal court, as a *713 conviction, or whether it is, when entered in a justice’s court, a sentence which gives to a defendant the right to a trial de novo on appeal to the Superior Court under our statute. Oode, Sections 1234 and 900. The question presented here is not whether such judgment, when entered by consent of the defendant, is a conviction or sentence in contemplation of law, but whether an appeal lies when such order is entered against the will of the defendant, as is evinced in this case by his asking immediately for an appeal. This is not, on the other hand, in the ordinary sense, a refusal to proceed to judgment, but a persistent claim of the right, on the part of the inferior tribunal, to enter an order that upon its face involves the false assumption that it is entered with the defendant’s assent. It is true that the defendant had the right to demand that he be sentenced, though a prayer for judgment upon himself would have been a somewhat novel practice, but, while he did not make such motion, the appeal is his protest against and exception to the order made. Was the Superior Court authorized to proceed to tidal de novo % Or was it necessary fordhe defendant to bring up the case by writ of recordari, get an order in the nature of a procedendo, and wait for redress till by that tedious practice the justice should be compelled to enter an appealable judgment.

In the cases of State v. Swepson, 79 N. C., 632; 81 N. C., 571; 83 N. C., 584, and 84 N. C., 827, it was held that the refusal of the Superior Court to entertain a motion to amend a record upon the erroneous idea of want of power to amend, was reviewable not by appeal but by certiorari under the supervisory power of the Supreme Court. If the same circuitous practice is to be adopted by the Superior Court in supervising the proceedings of an inferior tribunal, which is not a court pf record, it would follow that the judgment of the court below dismissing the appeal *714 must be sustained, and tbe defendant must seek redress by a recordari

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.E. 164, 117 N.C. 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-griffis-nc-1895.