State v. Stegman
This text of 63 P. 746 (State v. Stegman) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellant was a prosecuting witness in a criminal proceeding in which the defendant was acquitted, and the jury which tried the case found that the prosecution was instituted without probable cause. The costs in that case, amounting to $66.30, were adjudged against the appellant, of which he paid $33, and he was required to enter into a bond for the payment of the balance or stand committed [479]*479until the costs were paid. To meet this requirement a bond was executed which purported to have been signed by George Konrade, but which is alleged to have been forged, and upon the filing of the same the appellant was released from custody. He attacks the sufficiency of the information because the instrument alleged to have been forged is not in the statutory form and is not valid for the purposes for which it was intended. The statute provides that when costs have been adjudged against prosecuting witnesses in cases like this one the justice “shall commit such complainant to jail until such costs be paid, unless he shall execute a bond to the state in double the amount thereof, with security satisfactory to the justice, that he will pay such judgment within thirty days after the date of its rendition.” (Gen. Stat. 1899, §5681; Gen. Stat. 1897, ch. 104, §22.)
It is also contended that it is defective in not giving the date when the costs were adjudged. The bond was dated March 12, 1900, and the costs were required to be paid within thirty days from and after March 7, 1900. Inferentially, then, the judgment was rendered on March 7, 1900, as the statute requires that the complainant pay the judgment within thirty days after the date of its rendition. The recitals in the bond sufficiently show the identity of the judgment rendered, and the mere absence of a specific recital of the date of the rendition of the judgment will not invalidate the instrument, where the date inferentially appears and where the identity of the judgment is otherwise sufficiently shown. (Johnson v. Weatherwax, 9 Kan. 75; Tillson v. The State, 29 id. 452; Handy v. Land Co., 59 id. 395, 53 Pac. 67.)
There is no merit in the objections made to the rulings on the instructions, and, as the case appears to have been fairly submitted to the jury upon sufficient evidence, the verdict and judgment must be upheld.
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63 P. 746, 62 Kan. 476, 1901 Kan. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stegman-kan-1901.