Frazier v. Toliver
Frazier v. Toliver
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of ti-ie Court by
Affirming.
The sole question for decision in this case is: May a defendant convicted in a felony case be required to pay all the cost of the prosecution? Appellant Frazier was convicted in the Letcher circuit court of the crime of wilful murder, and his punishment fixed at life imprisonment in the state penitentiary. He appealed to this court and the judgment was affirmed. Later the clerk of the Letcher circuit court issued an execution against him for the costs. When the sheriff and his deputies were about to sell defendant’s property under a levy of execution appellant Frazier sued out a temporary restraining order against Sheriff Toliver and his deputies to prevent them from carrying out the sale and collecting the costs. The petition avers that the appellant Frazier had been convicted of a felony and that the Commonwealth had taken judgment against him for costs, which judgment was affirmed, and that later he was pardoned by the governor. It is also averred that the judgment for costs was null and void and that the attorney for the Commonwealth had no right or power to enter such a judgment and that the court was without right or power under the laws of the state of Kentucky to render such a judgment; but notwithstanding this the clerk taxed cost against him to the amount of $2,073.05. It admits that appellant obtained at least one continuance on his motion and that he is liable for the cost of this continuance under section 886, Kentucky Statutes, which he says he is ready, able and willing to pay when the amount is ascertained. It is then averred that the sheriff and his deputy will cause the property of the appellant to be sold to satisfy the said execution for the total costs'unless restrained by an order of the Letcher circuit court.
“The defendant in a criminal prosecution shall be adjudged to pay the costs of all continuances in his behalf, for which execution or other process may issue, as in civil cases, and, if convicted of a misdemeanor, all costs unpaid may be collected in the same manner as the fine; if convicted of a felony, by execution, or other process, as in civil cases.”
The first part of this section relates unquestionably to continuances in criminal prosecutions, and says that the defendant shall be adjudged to pay the costs of all continuances in his behalf and that such costs may be recovered by execution or other process as in civil cases. Of course all continuances precede a conviction. There can be no continuance after final conviction. It therefore follows that the costs of a continuance may be collected by execution before final trial is had. In other words, execution may be had for the cost of continuances as in civil cases. The statute then says if the defendant in a criminal prosecution be convicted of a misdemeanor, all costs unpaid may be collected in the same manner as a fine.
As said in the case of Ely v. Thompson, 3rd A. K. Marshall, pp. 70 and 74, the words “criminal prosecution” mean any prosecution carried on in the name of the Commonwealth for any offense or crime against society. So both misdemeanors and felonies are embraced in the expression “criminal prosecutions.” Sometimes it happens that the costs of continuances, even in a misdemeanor ease, cannot be recovered by execution because the defendant is execution proof. But this statute provides in such case that all costs unpaid, whether for continuances or otherwise incurred, may be collected ■by capias pro fine or other process, thus giving to the Commonwealth an extraordinary remedy to coerce the payment of costs in misdemeanor cases. Under a capias pro fine the defendant may be placed in jail until the fine and cost are satisfied. The statute then proceeds: “If convicted of a felony, by execution or other process, as in civil cases.” A felon could not be coerced by
It follows, therefore, that the petition of Frazier did not state facts sufficient to justify the granting of the equitable relief sought, and the trial court did not err in so holding and in sustaining the general demurrer thereto.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.