Dewey v. Commonwealth
Dewey v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion af the Court.
After a fine of $60, adjudged against Dewey, under a presentment for keeping a tippling house, had been remitted by the Governor, and the instrument of remission filed in the office of the Court, and after Dewey had paid the costs of the prosecution, as taxed by the Clerk, the Court, on motion of the Attorney for the Commonwealth, who had acted in the prosecution, directed the Clerk to correct the taxation of costs by adding thereto $30 as the Attorney’s fee, &c. Which having been done, and an execution having issued for this additional sum as a part of the costs, Dewey seeks a reversal of the order by which it was authorized.
Upon comparison of the act of 1840, (3 Stat. Laws, 250,) with the 6th and 7th sections of the act- of 1831, (2 St. Laios, 1382,) the fair deduction seems to be that the Legislature intended by the former act, to give to the Attorney for the Commonwealth the same compensation for conducting prosecutions for keeping tippling houses, and for other offences mentioned in the two sections of the act of 1831, as is given by the latter act to the County Attorney and others “sueing for the same,” that is “one half of the amount recovered." But assuming this construction, a question arises upon the face of the statutes, whether it was intended to vest in the Attorneys and others referred to, an absolute right to one half of the judgment, or whether the amount recovered means the amount received from the judgment, leaving the right subject to all those circumstances ¡which might intervene to prevent the enforcement of the judgment. It is doubtful whether the former construction would accomplish as certainly as the latter, the object of the Legislature, in giving this increased compensation, which was to insure the sup
This Court has said in the case of Rout vs Femester, (7 J. J. Marshall, 132.) that the power of the Executive “to remit ñnes and forfeitures is unlimited, illimitable and uncontrolable.” It is sufficient, in the present case, to say, that even if the Legislature had in unequivocal terms vested in the Attorney, &c. one half of the judgment as soon as obtained, there would still be a question whether it was intended to interfere with the power of remission in the Executive. And even if this intention were clearly evinced, a question would still arise, as to the effect of the legislative enactment to limit the constitutional poumr of remission in the Executive.
We do not, however, deem it necessary to determine these serious questions in the present case. For although the order complained of was probably made under the idea, that by law the Attorney for the Commonwealth was entitled to one half of the sum adjudged against the defendant, and that the remission of the entire penalty by the Governor did not defeat this right; and although it is clear that the claim of the Attorney, as founded on'the judgment, is entirely inconsistent with the right claimed and exercised by the Governor to remit the entire penalty, yet we deem it equally clear, that even if in consequence of the legislative acts referred to the remission by
Wherefore, the order directing the sum of $30 to be taxed in the costs as the Attorney’s fee, is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with directions to overrule the Attorney’s motion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.