State v. Bowers
State v. Bowers
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
George W. Bowers was indicted for violating the Act of 1864, ch. 184, a local law which prohibits the sale of
The preceding Rule 27, requires appeals in civil cases to be taken within two months from the date of the judgment, but this Rule 28 provides that “ the aforegoing rule shall not apply to criminal cases, but in all such cases the appeal or writ of error, allowed by law, shall be taken without delay, and the transcript of the .record shall forthwith, or as soon as the same can be made out, be transmitted to the Court of Appeals.”
It is very desirable, and for obvious reasons, that criminal cases should be disposed of as speedily as possible after trial, aad that no unnecessary delays should be interposed by appeals or writs of error. Hence the Legislature when, by the Act of 1872, ch. 316, it allowed exceptions to the rulings of the Court in criminal cases and an appeal as in civil cases, was careful to provide that such appeals “shall be heard by the Court of Appeals at the earliest convenient day after the same shall have been transmitted to said Court.” It was to carry out this purpose of preventing delay, that the rule in question was adopted. It prescribes no precise time within which an appeal or writ of error shall be taken after the ruling or judgment complained of is rendered, but requires it to be taken without delay and the record transmitted as soon as it can be made cut, and makes no distinction between an appeal or writ cf error taken by the State and one taken by the accused. What will amount to delay within the rule .must bé de
Writ of Error dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The State of Maryland v. George W. Bowers
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published